Abstract
Previous research had shown that processing speed and premorbid IQ are predictors of verbal-memory efficiency in patients with schizophrenia. We investigated whether the same factors are involved in visual memory. A total of 49 patients with schizophrenia and 43 healthy controls were administered a picture recognition task. Half of the pictures were black and white, and half were in color, in order to vary the depth of encoding. Processing speed was measured by three standard tasks, and premorbid IQ was measured by the National Adult Reading Test (NART). Patients were significantly impaired in picture recognition. Regression analyses revealed that NART score was a significant predictor of the recognition of both types of picture in patients. Processing speed was a significant predictor of the recognition of the colored pictures. The effect of diagnosis on the recognition of colored pictures was reduced to nonsignificance when processing speed was entered in the regression. These data suggest that premorbid IQ is involved in visual-recognition efficiency. However, the deficit observed in patients is accounted for by decreased processing speed.
We are sad to report the untimely death of Dr Pilowsky. The first author was funded by grants from the Leverhulme Trust and from the Alexander Gralnick Grant for Research on Schizophrenia, American Psychological Foundation. We gratefully acknowledge awards from Ian Karten Charitable Trust, Lorex Synthélabo, Norton Healthcare, Organon Laboratories, Pfizer, Pharmacia & Upjohn, Remedi, UCB Pharma, Zeneca, and Lundbeck.