| Literature DB >> 26388797 |
Matteo Cella1, Clare Reeder1, Til Wykes1.
Abstract
The cognitive problems experienced by people with schizophrenia not only impede recovery but also interfere with treatments designed to improve overall functioning. Hence there has been a proliferation of new therapies to treat cognitive problems with the hope that improvements will benefit future intervention and recovery outcomes. Cognitive remediation therapy (CR) that relies on intensive task practice can support basic cognitive functioning but there is little evidence on how these therapies lead to transfer to real life skills. However, there is increasing evidence that CR including elements of transfer training (e.g., strategy use and problem solving schemas) produce higher functional outcomes. It is hypothesized that these therapies achieve higher transfer by improving metacognition. People with schizophrenia have metacognitive problems; these include poor self-awareness and difficulties in planning for complex tasks. This paper reviews this evidence as well as research on why metacognition needs to be explicitly taught as part of cognitive treatments. The evidence is based on research on learning spanning from neuroscience to the field of education. Learning programmes, and CRT, may be able to achieve better outcomes if they explicitly teach metacognition including metacognitive knowledge (i.e., awareness of the cognitive requirements and approaches to tasks) and metacognitive regulation (i.e., cognitive control over the different task relevant cognitive requirements). These types of metacognition are essential for successful task performance, in particular, for controlling effort, accuracy and efficient strategy use. We consider metacognition vital for the transfer of therapeutic gains to everyday life tasks making it a therapy target that may yield greater gains compared to cognition alone for recovery interventions.Entities:
Keywords: awareness; cognition; learning; metacognition; psychological therapy; recovery; schizophrenia
Year: 2015 PMID: 26388797 PMCID: PMC4555655 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Shows proficiency levels (with examples) of metacognitive knowledge and regulation.
| The person is aware that cognitive operations are necessary for accomplishing everyday life tasks | Following a conversation is hard work and very confusing | |
| The person has an understanding of the mental processes necessary to complete specific tasks | Following a conversation is hard because you have to pay attention to what the person is saying and remember the information | |
| The person understands the impact of specific cognitive operations and associated difficulties on everyday life tasks and operations | I have problems in remembering people's name and because of that people sometime think that I'm rude | |
| The person has suboptimal adjustment to compensate for cognitive difficulties | I only pick up leaflets and small books because I'm not good at reading (e.g., avoidance) | |
| The person can anticipate some demands, shows limited degree of adaptation and planning | Studying in a quiet environment helps concentration but it is hard to retain information | |
| The person regularly uses strategies, adapts cognitive effort to task demands and can improve performance given practice and feed-back (e.g., learning from experience) | If I'm rested, I take notes and rehearse the material a couple of times I'm more likely to remember information. If there is too much to learn I can divide information in manageable chunks and take breaks |
Figure 1A model of how cognitive remediation influences functional outcomes. Adapted from Wykes et al. (2012).
Figure 2A model of how metacognition can influences functional outcomes.
Figure 3Shows a formulation model using metacognition in the context of CR.