In my fourth year of my PhD on schizophrenia and I'm currently writing up my thesis. I'm procrastinating right now so thought I'd do something useful with what I've been studying.

And no, schizophrenia is not multiple personality disorder.

Edit: I have to get dinner and run some errands. I'm really enjoying this so I will definitely get back and answer the rest of the questions.

  • Sidereal223 [he/him]
    hexagon
    ·
    4 years ago

    This is sort-of the area of my research so I'm glad you asked about this! Although the popular understanding of the research is that schizophrenic patients can tickle themselves, I think it's more correct to say that they are more easily able to tickle themselves. Let me further explain:

    The whole phenomenon rests on this concept of sensory attenuation. Basically, whenever we perform some sort of motor action (say, self-tickling), our brain attempts to predict the sensory consequences of the movement. If the resulting sensations match the prediction, our brain then suppresses our response to the incoming sensory signals. This is why we can't tickle ourselves. However, when they don't match (such as when someone else tickles us), then we fully experience the sensations.

    In terms of the predictions that the brain makes, it includes things like how much physical force or the timing of the incoming sensation. In the tickling studies. people used stuff like a stick with a piece of foam attached on the end to try to tickle themselves. While most people couldn't tickle themselves with this setup, schizophrenic patients could do so under conditions. For example, when patients moved a lever that then moved the foam-stick, that's when they experienced the tickling feeling. So the idea here is that schizophrenia patients are can more easily be induced to tickle themselves, not that they can simply use their own hand to do so. Sorry for the long essay!

    • AFineWayToDie [he/him]
      ·
      4 years ago

      Thank you for the essay! I wouldn't have asked if I wasn't curious.

      My interpretation of the "tickle study" was that the brain has a function which tells it whether or not a signal is coming from inside the brain or outside. That is, hearing a song makes us think of it, but so does remembering a song. The same part of the brain lights up, and this "inside/outside" function reminds us whether or not the sensation from hearing/remembering that song is from recollection or perception. I imagined schizophrenics as having that function diminished or absent, and the result is that they perceive part or all of their own thought processes as actual images or voices.

      It's likely much more complicated than that, but that explanation appeals to be because it's so easy to look at someone experiencing hallucinations as "totally crazy," when it's actually just the result of one function among many which doesn't work properly. It reminds me that there's a mostly-functional human just beneath the psychosis, who needs help and understanding.

      • Sidereal223 [he/him]
        hexagon
        ·
        4 years ago

        Your interpretation is mostly correct, in that sensory attenuation helps to distinguish between sensory experiences as coming from the inside or outside, and that schizophrenics show a deficit in that part.

        And I couldnt agree with your last part more. I talk with people with schizophrenia and it's heartbreaking to hear of their life stories. They all had hopes and dreams and most were just entering the world after school (since onset is normally during young adult years). It's sad to hear how much the illness derailed their life.