Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10307463 | Schizophrenia Research | 2013 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
As researchers continue to understand non-clinical psychosis (NCP-brief psychotic-like experiences occurring in 5-7% of the general population; van Os et al., 2009), it is becoming evident that functioning deficits and facial emotion recognition (FER) impairment characterize this phenomenon. However, the extent to which these domains are related remains unclear. Social/role functioning and FER were assessed in 65 adolescents/young adults exhibiting low and high-NCP. Results indicate that FER and social/role functioning deficits were present in the High-NCP group, and that the domains were associated in this group alone. Taken together, findings suggest that a core emotive deficit is tied to broader social/role dysfunction in NCP.
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Authors
Andrea L. Pelletier, Derek J. Dean, Jessica R. Lunsford-Avery, Ashley K. Smith, Joseph M. Orr, Tina Gupta, Zachary B. Millman, Vijay A. Mittal,