4 results on '"Qin, Xiao-jing"'
Search Results
2. Mental time travel for self and others in individuals with a high level of schizotypy.
- Author
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Ye, Jun‐yan, Qin, Xiao‐jing, Cui, Ji‐fang, Jia, Lu‐xia, Shi, Hai‐song, Yang, Tian‐xiao, Lui, Simon S. Y., Wang, Ya, and Chan, Raymond C. K.
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SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *TOUGHNESS (Personality trait) , *SELF , *ANALYSIS of variance - Abstract
Mental time travel (MTT) is the ability to project oneself to the past or future through mental simulation. Moreover, MTT can involve self‐related or other‐related information. This study aimed to compare MTT in individuals with high levels of schizotypy and that in their counterparts with low levels of schizotypy. Participants with high (n = 37) and low (n = 37) levels of schizotypy completed an MTT task with four conditions [2 (Condition: self vs. other) × 2 (Time orientation: past vs. future)]. They were required to recall past events that had happened to themselves or to a non‐intimate person, and to imagine possible future events that might happen to themselves or to a non‐intimate person, related to cue words. Outcome measures included specificity, vividness, sense of experience, emotional valence, emotional intensity, proportion of first‐person visual perspective in events, and difficulty in event generation. A 2 (Group: high vs. low levels of schizotypy) × 2 (Condition) × 2 (Time orientation) mixed analysis of variance was conducted on each index. Results showed that self‐related MTT was more specific than other‐related MTT in low levels of schizotypy participants but not in high levels of schizotypy participants. Participants with a high level of schizotypy reported fewer specific events, and reported events with lower vividness and positive emotion than did those with a low level of schizotypy. Self‐related MTT showed higher levels of phenomenological characteristics than did other‐related MTT. In conclusion, individuals with a high level of schizotypy have altered MTT, and cannot benefit from the self‐advantage effect on the specificity of MTT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Neural correlates of mental time travel in individuals with high level of schizotypy.
- Author
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Ye, Jun-yan, Qin, Xiao-jing, Cui, Ji-Fang, Shi, Hai-song, Liu, Jia-Li, Huang, Jia, Wang, Yi, Yang, Tian-Xiao, Lui, Simon S.Y., Wang, Ya, and Chan, Raymond C.K.
- Subjects
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CINGULATE cortex , *PREFRONTAL cortex , *SCHIZOTYPAL personality disorder , *FUNCTIONAL magnetic resonance imaging , *PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY - Abstract
Mental time travel (MTT) is the ability to re-experience past events (autobiographic memory, AM) and pre-experience possible future events (episodic future thinking, EFT) through mental simulation. Empirical findings suggest that individuals with high level of schizotypy exhibit MTT impairment. However, the neural correlates of this impairment remain unclear. Thirty-eight individuals with high level of schizotypy and 35 low level of schizotypy were recruited to complete an MTT imaging paradigm. Participants were required to recall past events (AM condition), imagine possible future events (EFT condition) related to cue words, or generate exemplars related to category words (control condition) while undergoing functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). AM showed greater activation in precuneus, bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, thalamus, and middle frontal gyrus than EFT. Individuals with high level of schizotypy exhibited reduced activation in the left anterior cingulate cortex during AM (vs. Control) and in the medial frontal gyrus during EFT (vs. Control) compared to individuals with low level of schizotypy. Although psychophysiological interaction analyses did not show any significant group difference, individuals with high level of schizotypy exhibited functional connectivity between left anterior cingulate cortex (seed) and right thalamus, between medial frontal gyrus (seed) and left cerebellum during MTT, whereas individuals with low level of schizotypy did not exhibit these functional connectivities. These findings suggest that decreased brain activations may underlie MTT deficits in individuals with high level of schizotypy. • AM showed greater activation in precuneus, bilateral posterior cingulate cortex, thalamus, and middle frontal gyrus than EFT. • Individuals with high schizotypy showed reduced activation in the left anterior cingulate cortex during AM and medial frontal gyrus during EFT. • Individuals with high and low schizotypy exhibited different functional connectivity patterns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Life review therapy enhances mental time travel in patients with schizophrenia.
- Author
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Chen, Gui-fang, Liu, Lu-lu, Cui, Ji-fang, Chen, Tao, Qin, Xiao-jing, Gan, Jie-chun, Bi, Bin, Neumann, David L., Shum, David H.K., Wang, Ya, and Chan, Raymond C.K.
- Subjects
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MENTAL health , *PEOPLE with schizophrenia , *SCHIZOPHRENIA treatment , *EMOTIONS , *COGNITIVE ability - Abstract
Mental Time Travel (MTT) is the ability of individuals to project themselves to the past or to the future. Studies have shown that schizophrenia (SZ) patients are impaired in MTT. The present study aimed to examine whether MTT in patients with SZ can be improved through Life Review Therapy. Fifty patients with SZ were randomly assigned to the training (SZ-training) or control (SZ-control) group. Whereas the SZ-training group received four-week Life Review Therapy in addition to conventional treatment, the SZ-control group only received conventional treatment. MTT, emotional status, life satisfaction and cognitive functions were assessed before and after the training. We also recruited 25 matched healthy controls to complete all the assessments at baseline. After training, the SZ-training group showed higher specificity and more field perspective than the SZ-control group. No significant difference was found between the SZ-training group post-training assessment and the healthy controls. The SZ-training group also showed significant improvements in emotional expression, semantic memory and verbal fluency, but the SZ-control group did not show such improvements. These results indicated that Life Review Therapy is effective in improving MTT of SZ patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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