| Literature DB >> 29550719 |
Katharina Förster1, Silke Jörgens2, Tracy M Air3, Christian Bürger2, Verena Enneking2, Ronny Redlich2, Dario Zaremba2, Dominik Grotegerd2, Katharina Dohm2, Susanne Meinert2, Elisabeth J Leehr2, Joscha Böhnlein2, Jonathan Repple2, Nils Opel2, Erhan Kavakbasi2, Volker Arolt2, Pienie Zwitserlood4, Udo Dannlowski2, Bernhard T Baune5.
Abstract
To understand how cognitive dysfunction contributes to social cognitive deficits in depression, we investigated the relationship between executive function and social cognitive performance in adolescents and young adults during current and remitted depression, compared to healthy controls. Social cognition and executive function were measured in 179 students (61 healthy controls and 118 patients with depression; Mage = 20.60 years; SDage = 3.82 years). Hierarchical regression models were employed within each group (healthy controls, remitted depression, current depression) to examine the nature of associations between cognitive measures. Social cognitive and executive function did not significantly differ overall between depressed patients and healthy controls. There was no association between executive function and social cognitive function in healthy controls or in remitted patients. However, in patients with a current state of depression, lower cognitive flexibility was associated with lower performance in facial-affect recognition, theory-of-mind tasks and overall affect recognition. In this group, better planning abilities were associated with decreased performance in facial affect recognition and overall social cognitive performance. While we infer that less cognitive flexibility might lead to a more rigid interpretation of ambiguous social stimuli, we interpret the counterintuitive negative correlation of planning ability and social cognition as a compensatory mechanism.Entities:
Keywords: Cognition; Cognitive dysfunction; Depression; Social behavior; Theory of mind
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29550719 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2018.02.046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222