Deficits in Domains of Social Cognition in Schizophrenia: A Meta-Analysis of the Empirical Evidence
University of California San Diego · University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · +1 more institution
Abstract
Social cognition is strongly associated with functional outcome in schizophrenia, making it an important target for treatment. Our goal was to examine the average magnitude of differences between schizophrenia patients (SCs) and normal comparison (NCs) patients across multiple domains of social cognition recognized by the recent NIMH consensus statement: theory of mind (ToM), social perception, social knowledge, attributional bias, emotion perception, and emotion processing. METHOD: We conducted a meta-analysis of peer-reviewed studies of social cognition in schizophrenia, published between 1980 and November, 2011.
112 studies reporting results from 3908 SCs and 3570 NCs met our inclusion criteria. SCs performed worse than NCs across all domains, with large effects for social perception (g = 1.04), ToM (g = 0.96), emotion perception (g = 0.89), and emotion processing (g = 0.88). Regression analyses showed that statistically significant heterogeneity in effects within domains was not explained by age, education, or gender. Greater deficits in social and emotion perception were associated with inpatient status, and greater deficits in emotion processing were associated with longer illness duration.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.12
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
5- GNGauri N. SavlaCorresponding
University of California San Diego
- LVLea Vella
University of California San Diego
- CCCasey C. Armstrong
University of California San Diego
- DLDavid L. Penn
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- EWElizabeth W. Twamley
University of California San Diego, VA San Diego Healthcare System
Topics & keywords
- Emotion perception
- Psychology
- Social cognition
- Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)
- Psychosocial
- Cognition
- Theory of mind
- Social cognitive theory
- Reduced inequalities