Abstract: Schizophrenia occurs in around 1% of the population worldwide and is diagnosed in all cultures and socioeconomic groups. Individuals with schizophrenia experience varying levels of social cognitive deficits in domains such as theory of mind, empathy, affect recognition, attributional style and social perception. These deficits may serve as barriers to normal social interactions and affect functional outcome due to the increased difficulty perceiving/responding to the actions of others and correctly identifying social contexts. This could result in difficulties maintaining employment, functioning in the community and communicating with others. Evidence comparing cross-cultural differences using psychometrically strong social cognitive measures, most of which were developed in the US and UK, is lacking. There has been limited consideration of how culture and social norms affect the function and accuracy of these measures to assess social cognitive deficits, and whether social cognitive ability differs around the world. The following meta-analysis aims to fill in some of these gaps by investigating the cross-cultural validity of social cognitive measures created in Western countries. Relevant studies, published in or after 1980, and collected from the PsychINFO, PubMed, CINAHL, and ProQuest Dissertations and Theses databases were coded and then analyzed using Comprehensive Meta-Analysis software. We chose to focus specifically on eight measures identified by experts in the Social Cognition Psychometric Evaluation (SCOPE) trial as the best existing measures of social cognition (Pinkham et al, 2014). Insight into how culture influences the measurement and expression of social cognition could help lead to the development of more culturally-sensitive approaches to the assessment, treatment, and understanding of schizophrenia. More accurate measures of social cognitive deficits will ultimately allow for more effective treatment intervention for people with schizophrenia all around the world.
Video:
https://wesleyan.zoom.us/j/98650008385?pwd=RXoyOVR5N2Y4WFFaNWFXZnRvU2d1dz09
Social-Cognition-Poster-2-2Live Poster Session:
Thursday, July 29th 1:15-2:30pm EDT