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Computerised working memory‐based cognitive remediation therapy does not affect Reading the Mind in The Eyes test performance or neural activity during a Facial Emotion Recognition test in psychosis
Author(s) -
Mothersill David,
Dillon Rachael,
Hargreaves April,
Castorina Marco,
Furey Emilia,
Fagan Andrew J.,
Meaney James F.,
Fitzmaurice Brian,
Hallahan Brian,
McDonald Colm,
Wykes Til,
Corvin Aiden,
Robertson Ian H.,
Donohoe Gary
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
european journal of neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.346
H-Index - 206
eISSN - 1460-9568
pISSN - 0953-816X
DOI - 10.1111/ejn.13976
Subject(s) - working memory , psychology , cognition , audiology , cognitive remediation therapy , affect (linguistics) , functional magnetic resonance imaging , psychosis , cognitive psychology , developmental psychology , neuroscience , medicine , psychiatry , communication
Abstract Working memory‐based cognitive remediation therapy ( CT ) for psychosis has recently been associated with broad improvements in performance on untrained tasks measuring working memory, episodic memory and IQ , and changes in associated brain regions. However, it is unclear whether these improvements transfer to the domain of social cognition and neural activity related to performance on social cognitive tasks. We examined performance on the Reading the Mind in the Eyes test (Eyes test) in a large sample of participants with psychosis who underwent working memory‐based CT ( N = 43) compared to a control group of participants with psychosis ( N = 35). In a subset of this sample, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging ( fMRI ) to examine changes in neural activity during a facial emotion recognition task in participants who underwent CT ( N = 15) compared to a control group ( N = 15). No significant effects of CT were observed on Eyes test performance or on neural activity during facial emotion recognition, either at p < 0.05 family‐wise error or at a p < 0.001 uncorrected threshold, within a priori social cognitive regions of interest. This study suggests that working memory‐based CT does not significantly impact an aspect of social cognition which was measured behaviourally and neurally. It provides further evidence that deficits in the ability to decode mental state from facial expressions are dissociable from working memory deficits, and suggests that future CT programmes should target social cognition in addition to working memory for the purposes of further enhancing social function.