Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia: A symptom or a Gestalt?

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Standard

Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia : A symptom or a Gestalt? / Sandsten, Karl Erik; Zahavi, Dan; Parnas, Josef.

In: Psychopathology, Vol. 55, No. 5, 2022, p. 273–281.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sandsten, KE, Zahavi, D & Parnas, J 2022, 'Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia: A symptom or a Gestalt?', Psychopathology, vol. 55, no. 5, pp. 273–281. https://doi.org/10.1159/000524100

APA

Sandsten, K. E., Zahavi, D., & Parnas, J. (2022). Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia: A symptom or a Gestalt? Psychopathology, 55(5), 273–281. https://doi.org/10.1159/000524100

Vancouver

Sandsten KE, Zahavi D, Parnas J. Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia: A symptom or a Gestalt? Psychopathology. 2022;55(5):273–281. https://doi.org/10.1159/000524100

Author

Sandsten, Karl Erik ; Zahavi, Dan ; Parnas, Josef. / Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia : A symptom or a Gestalt?. In: Psychopathology. 2022 ; Vol. 55, No. 5. pp. 273–281.

Bibtex

@article{1e22df92824b4ce6869b400ef644a590,
title = "Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia: A symptom or a Gestalt?",
abstract = "The concept of schizophrenia (SCZ) was originally associated with a disorder of formal strata of the self. During the last two decades, empirical studies have demonstrated a selective hyper-aggregation of self-disorders in the SCZ spectrum. As with other scientific research areas, the role of self-disturbances in SCZ has been up for debate in various disciplines including cognitive sciences, philosophy of mind, and psychopathology. Several philosophical papers have used the psychopathological phenomena of “thought insertion” as an alleged example of a complete loss of minimal selfhood. In the field of psychopathology, it has been claimed that self-disorders may comprise a transdiagnostic phenotype. Common to these approaches is the underlying assumption that self-disorders reflect well-delineated and isolated symptoms akin to the notion of symptom in the medical model. The aim of this paper was to argue that the clinical manifestation of self-disturbances is to be seen as aspects of a Gestalt of disturbed experiential selfhood. Methods: Seven videotaped interviews of patients with SCZ who were emblematic of very diverse symptomatological constellations were selected and jointly watched and discussed by the authors, who reached a consensus assessment. The interviews were semi-structured and narrative in nature in order to obtain faithful self-descriptions according to the standards of phenomenologically oriented interviews. For the purpose of this article, we chose 4 videos from which excerpts were verbatim transcribed and translated from Danish into English. Results: The patients describe unique combinations of various psychopathological phenomena such as diminished sense of embodied self-presence, loss of ego boundaries, diminished sense of self, alienation and objectification of the experiential processes, mirror-phenomena, and Schneiderian passivity phenomena. Discussion: Through an interweaving of the four vignettes and their subsequent psychopathological discussions, we argue that the invariant commonality across the different symptomatic expressions in these patients resides in a Gestalt of pervasive disturbance of self-experience. From a phenomenological perspective, these self-disturbances target a basic structure of phenomenal consciousness, namely, the first-person givenness of experience. We conclude that self-disorders reflect a trait-instability in the most basic structures of consciousness in SCZ and that its clinical manifestations are to be seen as aspects of a particular Gestalt rather than appearing as separate and well-delineated symptoms",
author = "Sandsten, {Karl Erik} and Dan Zahavi and Josef Parnas",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1159/000524100",
language = "English",
volume = "55",
pages = "273–281",
journal = "Psychopathology",
issn = "0254-4962",
publisher = "S Karger AG",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Disorder of selfhood in schizophrenia

T2 - A symptom or a Gestalt?

AU - Sandsten, Karl Erik

AU - Zahavi, Dan

AU - Parnas, Josef

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - The concept of schizophrenia (SCZ) was originally associated with a disorder of formal strata of the self. During the last two decades, empirical studies have demonstrated a selective hyper-aggregation of self-disorders in the SCZ spectrum. As with other scientific research areas, the role of self-disturbances in SCZ has been up for debate in various disciplines including cognitive sciences, philosophy of mind, and psychopathology. Several philosophical papers have used the psychopathological phenomena of “thought insertion” as an alleged example of a complete loss of minimal selfhood. In the field of psychopathology, it has been claimed that self-disorders may comprise a transdiagnostic phenotype. Common to these approaches is the underlying assumption that self-disorders reflect well-delineated and isolated symptoms akin to the notion of symptom in the medical model. The aim of this paper was to argue that the clinical manifestation of self-disturbances is to be seen as aspects of a Gestalt of disturbed experiential selfhood. Methods: Seven videotaped interviews of patients with SCZ who were emblematic of very diverse symptomatological constellations were selected and jointly watched and discussed by the authors, who reached a consensus assessment. The interviews were semi-structured and narrative in nature in order to obtain faithful self-descriptions according to the standards of phenomenologically oriented interviews. For the purpose of this article, we chose 4 videos from which excerpts were verbatim transcribed and translated from Danish into English. Results: The patients describe unique combinations of various psychopathological phenomena such as diminished sense of embodied self-presence, loss of ego boundaries, diminished sense of self, alienation and objectification of the experiential processes, mirror-phenomena, and Schneiderian passivity phenomena. Discussion: Through an interweaving of the four vignettes and their subsequent psychopathological discussions, we argue that the invariant commonality across the different symptomatic expressions in these patients resides in a Gestalt of pervasive disturbance of self-experience. From a phenomenological perspective, these self-disturbances target a basic structure of phenomenal consciousness, namely, the first-person givenness of experience. We conclude that self-disorders reflect a trait-instability in the most basic structures of consciousness in SCZ and that its clinical manifestations are to be seen as aspects of a particular Gestalt rather than appearing as separate and well-delineated symptoms

AB - The concept of schizophrenia (SCZ) was originally associated with a disorder of formal strata of the self. During the last two decades, empirical studies have demonstrated a selective hyper-aggregation of self-disorders in the SCZ spectrum. As with other scientific research areas, the role of self-disturbances in SCZ has been up for debate in various disciplines including cognitive sciences, philosophy of mind, and psychopathology. Several philosophical papers have used the psychopathological phenomena of “thought insertion” as an alleged example of a complete loss of minimal selfhood. In the field of psychopathology, it has been claimed that self-disorders may comprise a transdiagnostic phenotype. Common to these approaches is the underlying assumption that self-disorders reflect well-delineated and isolated symptoms akin to the notion of symptom in the medical model. The aim of this paper was to argue that the clinical manifestation of self-disturbances is to be seen as aspects of a Gestalt of disturbed experiential selfhood. Methods: Seven videotaped interviews of patients with SCZ who were emblematic of very diverse symptomatological constellations were selected and jointly watched and discussed by the authors, who reached a consensus assessment. The interviews were semi-structured and narrative in nature in order to obtain faithful self-descriptions according to the standards of phenomenologically oriented interviews. For the purpose of this article, we chose 4 videos from which excerpts were verbatim transcribed and translated from Danish into English. Results: The patients describe unique combinations of various psychopathological phenomena such as diminished sense of embodied self-presence, loss of ego boundaries, diminished sense of self, alienation and objectification of the experiential processes, mirror-phenomena, and Schneiderian passivity phenomena. Discussion: Through an interweaving of the four vignettes and their subsequent psychopathological discussions, we argue that the invariant commonality across the different symptomatic expressions in these patients resides in a Gestalt of pervasive disturbance of self-experience. From a phenomenological perspective, these self-disturbances target a basic structure of phenomenal consciousness, namely, the first-person givenness of experience. We conclude that self-disorders reflect a trait-instability in the most basic structures of consciousness in SCZ and that its clinical manifestations are to be seen as aspects of a particular Gestalt rather than appearing as separate and well-delineated symptoms

U2 - 10.1159/000524100

DO - 10.1159/000524100

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35350027

VL - 55

SP - 273

EP - 281

JO - Psychopathology

JF - Psychopathology

SN - 0254-4962

IS - 5

ER -

ID: 300010729