#3513. A systematic review of the neural correlates of multisensory integration in schizophrenia

October 2026publication date
Proposal available till 30-05-2025
4 total number of authors per manuscript0 $

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Journal’s subject area:
Linguistics and Language;
Language and Linguistics;
Developmental and Educational Psychology;
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology;
Cognitive Neuroscience;
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Abstract:
Multisensory integration (MSI), in which sensory signals from different modalities are unified, is necessary for our comprehensive perception of and effective adaptation to the objects and events around us. Individuals with schizophrenia suffer from impairments in MSI, which could explain typical symptoms like hallucination and reality distortion. Because the neural correlates of aberrant MSI in schizophrenia help us understand the physiognomy of this psychiatric disorder, we performed a systematic review of the current research on this subject. The literature search concerned investigated MSI in diagnosed schizophrenia patients compared to healthy controls using brain imaging. The results indicated that multisensory processes in schizophrenia are associated with aberrant, mainly reduced, neural activity in several brain regions, as measured by event-related potentials, oscillations, activity and connectivity.
Keywords:
EEG; fMRI; Multimodal perception; Multisensory integration; Neural correlates; Schizophrenia

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