Neurocognitive and social cognitive correlates of social exclusion in psychotic disorders: a 20-year follow-up cohort study.

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Neurocognitive and social cognitive correlates of social exclusion in psychotic disorders: a 20-year follow-up cohort study.
Authors: Peralta, Victor (AUTHOR), Sánchez-Torres, Ana M. (AUTHOR), Gil-Berrozpe, Gustavo (AUTHOR), de Jalón, Elena García (AUTHOR), Moreno-Izco, Lucía (AUTHOR), Peralta, David (AUTHOR), Janda, Lucía (AUTHOR), Cuesta, Manuel J. (AUTHOR), Ballesteros, A. (AUTHOR), Fañanás, L. (AUTHOR), Gil-Berrozpe, G. (AUTHOR), Hernández, R. (AUTHOR), Lorente, R. (AUTHOR), Papiol, S. (AUTHOR), Ribeiro, M. (AUTHOR), Rosero, A. (AUTHOR)
Source: Social Psychiatry & Psychiatric Epidemiology. Feb2025, Vol. 60 Issue 2, p413-426. 14p.
Subjects: Cognitive psychology, Social marginality, Cognitive testing, Cognition, Social perception
Abstract: Purpose: Little is known about the relationship between social exclusion and cognitive impairment in psychosis. We conducted a long-term cohort study of first-episode psychosis to examine the association between comprehensive measures of cognitive impairment and social exclusion assessed at follow-up. Methods: A total of 173 subjects with first-episode psychosis were assessed after a 20-year follow-up for 7 cognitive domains and 12 social exclusion indicators. Associations between sets of variables were modeled using multivariate regression, where social exclusion indicators were the dependent variables, cognitive domains were the independent variables, and age, gender, and duration of follow-up were covariates. Results: The total scores on the measures of cognition and social exclusion were strongly associated (β = −.469, ∆R2 = 0.215). Participants with high social exclusion were 4.24 times more likely to have cognitive impairment than those with low social exclusion. Verbal learning was the cognitive function most related to social exclusion domains, and legal capacity was the exclusion domain that showed the strongest relationships with individual cognitive tests. Neurocognition uniquely contributed to housing, work activity, income, and educational attainment, whereas social cognition uniquely contributed to neighborhood deprivation, family and social contacts, and discrimination/stigma. Neurocognition explained more unique variance (11.5%) in social exclusion than social cognition (5.5%). Conclusion: The domains of cognitive impairment were strongly and differentially related to those of social exclusion. Given that such an association pattern is likely bidirectional, a combined approach, both social and cognitive, is of paramount relevance in addressing the social exclusion experienced by individuals with psychotic disorders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection
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