The British Journal of Psychiatry 134: 595-601 (1979)
© 1979 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
The predictability of thought disordered speech in schizophrenic patients
TC Manschreck, BA Maher, ME Rucklos and MT White
Previous research has resulted in inconsistent findings regarding the
predictability of schizophrenic speech samples. It was hypothesized that
the predictability of schizophrenic speech varies as a function of
clinically manifest thought disorder. In an experiment based on the Cloze
procedure, raters were asked to predict ten passages of schizophrenic
speech and eight passages of normal speech under conditions of fourth- and
fifth-word deletion. Differences emerged between the samples only for the
fifth-word deletion procedure. When the schizophrenic samples were grouped
according to the presence of thought disorder, thought-disordered speech
was significantly less predictable than normal and non-thought disordered
schizophrenic speech. Furthermore, non-thought-disordered schizophrenic
speech was no less predictable than normal speech. It is concluded that
schizophrenia should be more carefully defined and that thought disorder
should be routinely assessed in future investigations.