AI Article Synopsis

  • - Patients with schizophrenia are prone to significant cognitive biases, particularly jumping to conclusions, which may contribute to their condition's development and show a disparity between their objective reasoning abilities and subjective insight.
  • - The study involved 140 patients with schizophrenia and 60 healthy controls, using cognitive tasks and the Beck Cognitive Insight Scale to assess reasoning and self-awareness.
  • - Results indicated that patients made quicker decisions with less accurate reasoning compared to controls, yet reported similar or higher self-confidence and self-reflectiveness, suggesting a lack of awareness of their cognitive impairments.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients with schizophrenia display a number of cognitive biases, particularly a tendency to jump to conclusions, which are implicated in the pathogenesis of the disorder. The present study contrasted the degree of objective reasoning biases with subjective cognitive insight. We expected that patients with schizophrenia would display greater objective than subjective impairment suggestive of poor metacognitive awareness.

Methods: Patients with schizophrenia (n=140) and healthy controls (n=60) underwent a test battery encompassing a cognitive bias paradigm (beads task) as well as neurocognitive tests (story recall, trail-making tests). In addition, they were administered the Beck Cognitive Insight Scale (BCIS), a subjective measure of (meta)cognitive awareness.

Results: Corroborating prior research on decision making, draws to decisions were significantly delayed in controls relative to patients, whereas the core jumping to conclusion parameter (i.e., decision after one or two pieces of information) bordered significance. Patients with schizophrenia showed a lowered decision threshold and impaired neurocognition relative to nonclinical controls. Despite poor cognitive performance and prior psychotic episodes, patients with schizophrenia showed similar scores on the self-confidence subscale of the BCIS and reported even higher levels of self-reflectiveness relative to healthy controls.

Discussion: The study demonstrates that patients with schizophrenia show severe cognitive biases and neurocognitive deficits but display only partial awareness herein. Raising cognitive insight in a non-insulting fashion and elevating patients' corrigibility as well as willingness to consider others' feedback and advice may help to narrow this gap and improve psychiatric symptomatology.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2016.08.021DOI Listing

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