Abstract
Schizophrenia is associated with a series of visual perception impairments, which might
impact on the patients’ every day life and be related to clinical symptoms. However, the
heterogeneity of the visual disorders make it a challenge to understand both the mechanisms
and the consequences of these impairments, i.e., the way patients experience
the outer world. Based on earlier psychiatry literature, we argue that issues regarding
time might shed a new light on the disorders observed in patients with schizophrenia.We
will briefly review the mechanisms involved in the sense of time continuity and clinical
evidence that they are impaired in patients with schizophrenia.We will then summarize a
recent experimental approach regarding the coding of time-event structure in time, namely
the ability to discriminate between simultaneous and asynchronous events. The use of an
original method of analysis allowed us to distinguish between explicit and implicit judgments
of synchrony.We showed that for SOAs below 20ms neither patients nor controls
fuse events in time. On the contrary subjects distinguish events at an implicit level even
when judging them as synchronous. In addition, the implicit responses of patients and
controls differ qualitatively. It is as if controls always put more weight on the last occurred
event, whereas patients have a difficulty to follow events in time at an implicit level. In
patients, there is a clear dissociation between results at short and large asynchronies,
that suggest selective mechanisms for the implicit coding of time-event structure. These
results might explain the disruption of the sense of time continuity in patients.We argue
that this line of research might also help us to better understand the mechanisms of the
visual impairments in patients and how they see their environment.