| Literature DB >> 30501568 |
Thorsten M Erle1, Niklas Barth2, Sascha Topolinski1.
Abstract
Depression is marked by rigid thinking and the inability to generate different and more positive views on the self. The current study conceptualises this a perspective-taking deficit, which is defined as a deficit in the ability to overcome one's egocentrism. Previous research has demonstrated that individuals with depression are impaired in Theory of Mind reasoning and empathy - two social cognitions that involve cognitive and affective perspective-taking. Here, it was investigated whether these deficits generalise to visuo-spatial perspective-taking. To test this, a convenience sample (N = 268; n = 62 high depressive symptoms; n = 206 healthy control participants) completed a test-battery including measures of cognitive and visuo-spatial perspective-taking and closely matched cognitive and visuo-spatial control tasks. The results showed that individuals exhibiting high levels of depressive symptoms were specifically impaired on both perspective-taking tasks but performed equally well on the control tasks. Interventions to combat rigid thinking in depression are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Depression; empathy; grounded cognition; perspective-taking; theory of mind
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30501568 DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2018.1552120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Emot ISSN: 0269-9931