Literature DB >> 27621104

Social cognition in Intermittent Explosive Disorder and aggression.

Emil F Coccaro1, Jennifer R Fanning2, Sarah K Keedy2, Royce J Lee2.   

Abstract

Social-emotional information processing (SEIP) was assessed in individuals with current DSM-5 Intermittent Explosive Disorder (IED: n = 100) and in healthy (n = 100) and psychiatric (n = 100) controls using a recently developed and validated self-rated questionnaire. SEIP vignettes depicted both direct aggressive and relationally aggressive scenarios of a socially ambiguous nature and were followed by questions assessing subjects' reactions and judgments about the vignettes. IED subjects differed from both healthy and psychiatric controls in all SEIP components. While hostile attribution was highly related to history of aggression, it was also directly correlated with negative emotional response. Further analysis revealed that this component, as well as response valuation and response efficiency, rather than hostile attribution, best explained history of aggressive behavior. A reformulated SEIP model, including self-reported history of childhood trauma, found that negative emotional response and response efficiency were the critical correlates for history of aggressive behavior. Psychosocial interventions of aggressive behavior in IED subjects may do well to include elements that work to reduce the emotional response to social threat and that work to restructure social cognition so that the tendency towards overt, or relationally, aggressive responding is reduced.
Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Aggression; Hostile attribution; Negative emotion; Social emotional information processing

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27621104      PMCID: PMC5744876          DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychires.2016.07.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Psychiatr Res        ISSN: 0022-3956            Impact factor:   4.791


  49 in total

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Review 7.  Corticolimbic function in impulsive aggressive behavior.

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8.  Social information processing and sociometric status: sex, age, and situational effects.

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9.  Aggression-related hostility bias and social problem-solving deficits in adult males with mental retardation.

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10.  Cerebrospinal fluid oxytocin, life history of aggression, and personality disorder.

Authors:  Royce Lee; Craig Ferris; L D Van de Kar; Emil F Coccaro
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Review 2.  Understanding Brain Mechanisms of Reactive Aggression.

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3.  Genome-Wide DNA Methylation Changes Associated with Intermittent Explosive Disorder: A Gene-Based Functional Enrichment Analysis.

Authors:  Janitza L Montalvo-Ortiz; Huiping Zhang; Chao Chen; Chunyu Liu; Emil F Coccaro
Journal:  Int J Neuropsychopharmacol       Date:  2018-01-01       Impact factor: 5.176

4.  ADHD symptom profiles, intermittent explosive disorder, adverse childhood experiences, and internalizing/externalizing problems in young offenders.

Authors:  Steffen Barra; Daniel Turner; Marcus Müller; Priscilla Gregorio Hertz; Petra Retz-Junginger; Oliver Tüscher; Michael Huss; Wolfgang Retz
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  4 in total

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