Social vs. non-social measures of learning potential for predicting community functioning across phase of illness in schizophrenia

Peter E. Clayson, Robert S. Kern, Keith H. Nuechterlein, Barbara J. Knowlton, Carrie E. Bearden, Tyrone D. Cannon, Alan P. Fiske, Livon Ghermezi, Jacqueline N. Hayata, Gerhard S. Hellemann, William P. Horan, Kimmy Kee, Junghee Lee, Kenneth L. Subotnik, Catherine A. Sugar, Joseph Ventura, Cindy M. Yee, Michael F. Green

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Studies demonstrate that dynamic assessment (i.e., learning potential) improves the prediction of response to rehabilitation over static measures in individuals with schizophrenia. Learning potential is most commonly assessed using neuropsychological tests under a test-train-test paradigm to examine change in performance. Novel learning potential approaches using social cognitive tasks may have added value, particularly for the prediction of social functioning, but this area is unexplored. The present study is the first to investigate whether patients with schizophrenia demonstrate social cognitive learning potential across phase of illness. This study included 43 participants at clinical high risk (CHR), 63 first-episode, and 36 chronic schizophrenia patients. Assessment of learning potential involved test-train-test versions of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (non-social cognitive learning potential) and the Facial Emotion Identification Test (social cognitive learning potential). Non-social and social cognition pre-training scores (static scores) uniquely predicted concurrent community functioning in patients with schizophrenia, but not in CHR participants. Learning potential showed no incremental explanation of variance beyond static scores. First-episode patients showed larger non-social cognitive learning potential than CHR participants and were similar to chronic patients; chronic patients and CHR participants were similar. Group differences across phase of illness were not observed for social cognitive learning potential. Subsequent research could explore whether non-social and social cognitive learning potential relate differentially to non-social versus social types of training and rehabilitation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)104-110
Number of pages7
JournalSchizophrenia Research
Volume204
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2018

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (P50MH066286 to K.H.N.). Writing of this manuscript was supported by the Office of Academic Affiliations, Advanced Fellowship Program in Mental Illness Research and Treatment, Department of Veterans Affairs. Financial support: This work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health ( P50MH066286 to K.H.N.).

FundersFunder number
National Institute of Mental HealthP50MH066286
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

    Keywords

    • Dynamic assessment
    • FEIT
    • Learning potential
    • Schizophrenia
    • Social cognition
    • WCST

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