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      Social Impairments in Mental Disorders: Recent Developments in Studying the Mechanisms of Interactive Behavior

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          Abstract

          Background

          Most mental disorders are associated with impairments in social functioning. Paradigms developed to study social functioning in laboratory settings mostly put participants in a detached observer point of view. However, some phenomena are inherently interactive and studying full-blown reciprocal interactions may be indispensable to understand social deficits in psychopathology.

          Method

          We conducted a narrative review on recent developments in the field of experimental clinical psychology and clinical social neuroscience that employs a second-person approach to studying social impairments in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Personality Disorder, Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD), and Schizophrenia.

          Results

          Recent developments in methodological, analytical, and technical approaches, such as dual eye-tracking, mobile eye-tracking, live video-feed, hyperscanning, or motion capture allow for a more ecologically valid assessment of social functioning. In individuals with ASD, these methods revealed reduced sensitivity to the presence of a real interaction partner as well as diminished behavioral and neural synchronicity with interaction partners. Initial evidence suggests that interactive paradigms might be a powerful tool to reveal reduced interpersonal sensitivity in Personality Disorders and increased interpersonal sensitivity in individuals with SAD.

          Conclusion

          A shift towards adapting a second-person account has clearly benefitted research on social interaction in psychopathology. Several studies showed profound differences in behavioral and neural measures during actual social interactions, as compared to engaging participants as mere observers. While research using truly interactive paradigms is still in its infancy, it holds great potential for clinical research on social interaction.

          Abstract

          • We review studies adopting a second-person account of social interaction in clinical psychology.

          • Studies show profound differences between actual social interactions and mere observations.

          • The full extent of impairments in social functioning unfolds only in complex social interactions.

          • New methodological developments hold great potential for research on social interaction deficits.

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          Most cited references54

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          Loneliness matters: a theoretical and empirical review of consequences and mechanisms.

          As a social species, humans rely on a safe, secure social surround to survive and thrive. Perceptions of social isolation, or loneliness, increase vigilance for threat and heighten feelings of vulnerability while also raising the desire to reconnect. Implicit hypervigilance for social threat alters psychological processes that influence physiological functioning, diminish sleep quality, and increase morbidity and mortality. The purpose of this paper is to review the features and consequences of loneliness within a comprehensive theoretical framework that informs interventions to reduce loneliness. We review physical and mental health consequences of loneliness, mechanisms for its effects, and effectiveness of extant interventions. Features of a loneliness regulatory loop are employed to explain cognitive, behavioral, and physiological consequences of loneliness and to discuss interventions to reduce loneliness. Loneliness is not simply being alone. Interventions to reduce loneliness and its health consequences may need to take into account its attentional, confirmatory, and memorial biases as well as its social and behavioral effects.
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            Perceived social isolation makes me sad: 5-year cross-lagged analyses of loneliness and depressive symptomatology in the Chicago Health, Aging, and Social Relations Study.

            We present evidence from a 5-year longitudinal study for the prospective associations between loneliness and depressive symptoms in a population-based, ethnically diverse sample of 229 men and women who were 50-68 years old at study onset. Cross-lagged panel models were used in which the criterion variables were loneliness and depressive symptoms, considered simultaneously. We used variations on this model to evaluate the possible effects of gender, ethnicity, education, physical functioning, medications, social network size, neuroticism, stressful life events, perceived stress, and social support on the observed associations between loneliness and depressive symptoms. Cross-lagged analyses indicated that loneliness predicted subsequent changes in depressive symptomatology, but not vice versa, and that this temporal association was not attributable to demographic variables, objective social isolation, dispositional negativity, stress, or social support. The importance of distinguishing between loneliness and depressive symptoms and the implications for loneliness and depressive symptomatology in older adults are discussed. (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved
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              Meeting of minds: the medial frontal cortex and social cognition.

              Social interaction is a cornerstone of human life, yet the neural mechanisms underlying social cognition are poorly understood. Recently, research that integrates approaches from neuroscience and social psychology has begun to shed light on these processes, and converging evidence from neuroimaging studies suggests a unique role for the medial frontal cortex. We review the emerging literature that relates social cognition to the medial frontal cortex and, on the basis of anatomical and functional characteristics of this brain region, propose a theoretical model of medial frontal cortical function relevant to different aspects of social cognitive processing.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                CPE
                Clin Psychol Eur
                Clinical Psychology in Europe
                Clin. Psychol. Eur.
                PsychOpen
                2625-3410
                28 June 2019
                2019
                : 1
                : 2
                : e33143
                Affiliations
                [a ]Clinical Psychology and Behavioral Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology, Technische Universität Dresden , Dresden, Germany
                [b ]Institute of Psychology, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
                [c ] Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences , Leipzig, Germany
                [4]Philipps-University of Marburg, Marburg, Germany
                Author notes
                [* ]Clinical Psychology and Behavioral Neuroscience, Faculty of Psychology, Technische Universität Dresden, Chemnitzer Str. 46, 01187 Dresden, Germany. lara.maliske@ 123456tu-dresden.de
                Article
                cpe.v1i2.2385
                10.32872/cpe.v1i2.33143
                d2af94cf-8bad-481b-9503-cc7472c1e2e0
                Copyright @ 2019

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) 4.0 License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 16 January 2019
                : 22 May 2019
                Categories
                Scientific Update and Overview

                Psychology
                ecological validity,mental disorders,second-person approach,social interaction,social cognition,social immersion

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