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Schizophrenia research has traditionally viewed visual processing abnormalities as downstream consequences of cortical dysfunction. However, the epidemiological observation that congenital cortical blindness appears to confer protection against schizophrenia, while peripheral blindness, regardless of its developmental timing, does not, indicates that visual input itself may play a more fundamental role in disease pathogenesis. Here we propose the Perceptual Theory of Schizophrenia (PerTh), a framework positing that instability in retinal dopamine signaling acts as an initiating mechanism in a subset of individuals. Retinal dopamine functions as a master gain controller, modulating receptive field properties and spatial frequency processing through D1 and D2 receptor-mediated mechanisms. We propose that schizophrenia associated genetic liabilities, encompassing dopaminergic, GABAergic, neuroimmune, and other risk factors, converge on retinal dopamine homeostasis, producing chronically unstable signals that corrupt the sensory foundation upon which predictive models of reality are built. This noisy input cascades through thalamocortical pathways, disrupting physical and cognitive salience formation, driving compensatory synaptic sprouting, and ultimately rendering diffuse, weak connections vulnerable to complement-mediated hyperpruning during adolescence. The framework integrates retinal electrophysiology, Bayesian predictive processing, and neurodevelopmental pruning mechanisms to explain symptom emergence timing, the predominance of auditory over visual hallucinations, and phenotypic heterogeneity. PerTh does not seek to replace existing dopaminergic, glutamatergic, neuroimmune, or neurodevelopmental models, but complements them by identifying a potential upstream contribution originating in the visual periphery. This perspective generates testable predictions and points to novel research directions targeting retinal function in psychosis.
Adámek et al. (Mon,) studied this question.