Abstract
Context: Establishing a neurobiological account of delusion formation that links cognitive processes, brain activity, and symptoms is important to furthering our understanding of psychosis. Objective: To explore a theoretical model of delusion formation that implicates prediction error-dependent associative learning processes in a pharmacological functional magnetic resonance imaging study using the psychotomimetic drug ketamine. Design: Within-subject, randomized, placebo-controlled study. Setting: Hospital-based clinical research facility, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, England. The work was completed within the Wellcome Trust and Medical Research Council Behavioral and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, Cambridge. Participants: Fifteen healthy, right-handed volunteers (8 of whom were male) with a mean±SD age of 29±7 years and a mean±SD predicted full-scale IQ of 113±4 were recruited from within the local community by advertisement. Interventions: Subjects were given low-dose ketamine (100 ng/mL of plasma) or placebo while performing a causal associative learning task during functional magnetic resonance imaging. In a separate session outside the scanner, the dose was increased (to 200 ng/mL of plasma) and subjects underwent a structured clinical interview. Main Outcome Measures: Brain activation, blood plasma levels of ketamine, and scores from psychiatric ratings scales (Brief Psychiatric Ratings Scale, Present State Examination, and Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale). Results: Low-dose ketamine perturbs error-dependent learning activity in the right frontal cortex (P=.03). High-dose ketamine produces perceptual aberrations (P=.01) and delusion-like beliefs (P=.007). Critically, subjects showing the highest degree of frontal activation with placebo show the greatest occurrence of drug-induced perceptual aberrations (P=.03) and ideas or delusions of reference (P=.04). Conclusions: These findings relate aberrant prediction error-dependent associative learning to referential ideas and delusions via a perturbation of frontal cortical function. They are consistent with a model of delusion formation positing disruptions in error-dependent learning. ©2006 American Medical Association. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Corlett, P. R., Honey, G. D., Aitken, M. R. F., Dickinson, A., Shanks, D. R., Absalom, A. R., … Fletcher, P. C. (2006). Frontal responses during learning predict vulnerability to the psychotogenic effects of ketamine: Linking cognition, brain activity, and psychosis. Archives of General Psychiatry, 63(6), 611–621. https://doi.org/10.1001/archpsyc.63.6.611
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