Abstract Schizophrenia spectrum disorders — including schizophrenia, schizotypal personality disorder (SPD), and attenuated psychosis syndrome — are increasingly recognized as disorders of temporal and perceptual integration rather than isolated chemical imbalances. This paper synthesizes the converging empirical literature on circadian rhythm disruption, retinal neurobiology, developmental visual abnormalities, and dopamine dysregulation in the schizophrenia spectrum with the formal theoretical framework of Constraint Topology Medicine (CTM) and Bidirectional Constraint Closure (BCC). The CTM framework proposes that health states are attractors in biological constraint space and disease is attractor displacement; it further proposes that biological systems are governed by two constraint regimes — C+ (integrative) and C- (differentiating) — whose mutual satisfaction at the Reflective Interface constitutes coherent biological operation. On this account, schizophrenia spectrum disorders represent a progressive failure of constraint coherence across temporal, perceptual, dopaminergic, and social integration systems — not a failure of any single system in isolation. The retina is proposed as a particularly significant node in this failure cascade: functioning simultaneously as a visual organ, a circadian pacemaker, and a dopaminergic constraint regulator, retinal dysfunction propagates desynchronization outward through multiple biological scales simultaneously. A novel developmental cascade model is presented, tracing the progression from early retinal instability through circadian fragmentation, dopaminergic dysregulation, compensatory cognitive strategies, and eventual trait consolidation in SPD or acute decompensation in schizophrenia. Therapeutic implications are developed, including a CTM-grounded rationale for chronobiological intervention, retinal optimization, and sensory integration therapies as constraint restoration protocols. The paper is designed to be fully self-contained and does not presuppose familiarity with the CTM framework. Keywords: schizophrenia spectrum, circadian rhythm, retinal neurobiology, dopamine, schizotypal personality disorder, constraint topology medicine, bidirectional constraint closure, temporal integration, developmental cascade, chronotherapy
Schoff et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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