New Way To Help Schizophrenia Sufferers' Social Skills
New Way To Help Schizophrenia Sufferers' Social Skills
New Way To Help Schizophrenia Sufferers' Social Skills
PhD student Kathryn McCabe is studying the eye movements of people with
schizophrenia to understand better how they view other people's faces.
Ms McCabe said the ability to recognise facial expressions and social clues was impaired
in people with schizophrenia.
"For most people this ability is relatively automatic and an essential component of good
social and interpersonal communication, but people with schizophrenia struggle to
interpret facial displays of emotion," she said.
"Despite the widespread availability of medication for people with schizophrenia, other
treatment options are also needed.
"We have developed a training program that we hope will help people with schizophrenia
to participate socially and pick-up on facial clues."Ms McCabe is recruiting people
between 18 and 65 who have schizophrenia to assist in her research. Participants will be
asked to take part in a weekly interview and half-hour testing session for six weeks where
their eye movements are recorded during a series of tasks.
HMRI is a partnership between the University of Newcastle, Hunter New England Health
and the community.
Schizophrenic Patients' Frozen Faces Harm Social
Interactions
ScienceDaily (Jan. 26, 2009) — Non-verbal communication, in the form
of facial expressions, may be impaired in people with schizophrenia.
Researchers have now shown that deficits in non-verbal expressivity in
schizophrenia are linked to poor social skills and an unawareness of the
thoughts and intentions of others.
Peculiar toes
Early vulnerability
Ploeger's research reveals that in the period between 20 and 40 days after
fertilisation, the embryo is highly susceptible to disruptions. In this period,
early organogenesis, there is a lot of interaction between the different parts of
the body. If something goes wrong with a given part of the body, it greatly
influences the development of other parts of the body. As people with
schizophrenia and autism frequently have physical abnormalities to body
parts formed during early organogenesis, Ploeger concluded that the
foundation for these psychiatric disorders is laid very early during pregnancy.
For example, she acquired information about autism from a study into
softenon use. Softenon is a drug against morning sickness that was
administered to women in the 1960s and 1970s. Later it was discovered that
severely disabled children were born as a result of this medicine. Autistic
children were born in four percent of pregnancies in which softenon was used,
whereas normally this figure is 0.1 percent. Women could state exactly when
they started to take softenon. The women who had taken softenon between
the 20th and 24th day of the pregnancy had the greatest chance of giving
birth to an autistic child.