Autism and schizophrenia spectrum disorder: phenomenological qualitative study of patients' experience.
Aleksandra Jeličić, Maja Drobnič Radobuljac, Louis Sass, Borut Škodlar
Frontiers in psychiatry January 1, 2025 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1669930 via PubMed
Summary
People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) often show similar social difficulties, leading to misdiagnosis. This study used in-depth phenomenological interviews with 42 participants aged 15 to 26, all with at least average intelligence and no acute psychiatric symptoms, to compare their subjective experiences. The SSD group showed higher levels of minimal self-disorder, demarcation phenomena, paranoid anxiety, short-term memory disorder, and magical thinking. Both groups overlapped in obsessive thinking, attention problems, diminished presence in the world, social anxiety, and hyper-reflectivity. The findings suggest that a disorder of ipseity (the sense of self) is central to SSD, while a disorder of primary intersubjectivity is central to ASD.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Comparative phenomenological study Qualitative Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 42 |
| Population | Individuals aged 15 to 26 with ASD or SSD, at least average intelligence, no acute psychiatric symptoms |
| Keywords | Autism spectrum disorder First-person perspective Intersubjectivity Ipseity disorder Schizophrenia spectrum disorder |
| Citations | 1 |
| Key finding | Qualitative differences in subjective experience point to a disorder of ipseity in SSD versus a disorder of primary intersubjectivity in ASD. |
Abstract
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) overlap in behavioral signs, particularly in social functioning; consequently, SSD patients are frequently misdiagnosed with ASD and vice versa. The neurodevelopmental and spectrum nature of both disorders, including milder variants, further complicates differential diagnosis, which calls for a better differentiation by looking at the subjective experience of patients. To our knowledge, no prior clinical studies have directly and comparatively examined the subjective experiences of individuals from these two spectra. The present study adopts a phenomenological approach traditionally applied to SSD; it reveals qualitative similarities and differences in these two spectra: in the experience of oneself, the world, and interpersonal relationships. The study included 42 participants, aged 15 to 26, all with at least average intelligence and no acute psychiatric symptoms, as verified by the Symptom Checklist (SCL-90-R). We interviewed participants in depth on their experiences and applied the Examination of Anomalous Self-Experience (EASE), and selected parts of the Examination of Anomalous World-Experience (EAWE). Differences were observed across all five EASE domains, with higher levels in the SSD as compared to ASD in minimal self-disorder, demarcation phenomena, paranoid anxiety, short term memory disorder, and magical thinking. Meanwhile, obsessive thinking, attention problems, diminished presence in the world, social anxiety, and hyper-reflectivity overlapped in both groups. The most significant qualitative overlapping within EAWE were in abnormalities within social interactions, increased auditory perception intensity and synesthesia. Within overlaps important qualitative differences are noted and described. Despite considerable overlap in outer manifestations, we found important qualitative differences that point to the centrality of a disorder of ipseity in the SSD versus of primary intersubjectivity in ASD.