| Frontiers in Psychology | |
| Metacognition-augmented cognitive remediation training reduces jumping to conclusions and overconfidence but not neurocognitive deficits in psychosis | |
| Matthias eNagel1  Stefan eWestermann2  Simone eKühn3  Teresa eThöring3  Bastian eWillenborg3  Steffen eMoritz3  | |
| [1] Asklepios Medical Center Hamburg-North, Wandsbek, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy;Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Institute of Psychology, University of Bern;University Medical Center Hamburg; | |
| 关键词: Schizophrenia; psychosis; cognitive remediation; neurocognition; cognitive biases; | |
| DOI : 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01048 | |
| 来源: DOAJ | |
【 摘 要 】
The majority of patients with schizophrenia display neurocognitive deficits (e.g. memory deficits) as well as inflated cognitive biases (e.g. jumping to conclusions). Both cognitive domains are implicated in the pathogenesis of the disorder and are known to compromise functional outcome. At present, there is a dearth of effective treatment options.A total of 90 patients with schizophrenia were recruited online (a diagnosis of schizophrenia had been confirmed in a large subgroup during a previous hospital admission). Subsequent to a baseline assessment encompassing psychopathology, self-reported cognition as well as objective memory and reasoning tests, patients were randomized to one of three conditions: standard cognitive remediation (mybraintraining), metacognition-augmented cognition remediation (CR) condition (variant of mybraintraining which encouraged patients to reduce speed of decision-making and attenuate response confidence when they made high-confidence judgements and hasty incorrect decisions) and a waitlist control group. Patients were retested after six weeks and again three months after the second assessment. Groups did not differ on psychopathology and neurocognitive parameters at any timepoint. However, at follow-up the metacognitive-augmented CR group displayed a significant reduction on jumping to conclusions and overconfidence. Treatment adherence correlated with a reduction of depression; gains in the training exercises from the standard mybraintraining condition were correlated with improved objective memory performance. The study suggests that metacognition-augmented CR may ameliorate cognitive biases but not neurocognition. The study ties in well with prior research showing that neurocognitive dysfunctions are rather resistant to change; the failure to detect significant improvement of CR or metacognition-augmented CR on psychopathology and neurocognition over time may partly be attributed to a number of methodological limitations of our s
【 授权许可】
Unknown