The British Journal of Psychiatry 146: 399-404 (1985)
© 1985 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Language in schizophrenia. The structure of monologues and conversations
DR Rutter
Experimental research into language in schizophrenia has been guided
traditionally by two main assumptions: that language disturbance is
widespread among schizophrenic patients and easy to detect and measure, and
that schizophrenia is fundamentally a cognitive disorder in which language
disturbance is part of an inability or failure to regulate one's thoughts.
However, recent findings have challenged both assumptions. Two experiments
are reported here, the first based on monologues, the second on
conversations, which were subjected to reconstruction and discourse
analyses. Schizophrenic material is found to be harder to follow than
normal, and is characterised by poor reference networks and inappropriate
use of questions. While some of the results are specific to the
schizophrenic group, others are found also in affective patients, but none
is the product of formal thought disorder. The central problem lies less in
cognition than in the social process of taking the role of the other.