Schizophrenia Research: Cognition (Mar 2020)

Schizophrenia, recovery and the self: An introduction to the special issue on metacognition

  • Paul H. Lysaker,
  • Jennifer E. Keane,
  • Sara Poirier Culleton,
  • Nancy B. Lundin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19

Abstract

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In this special issue, work is presented linking metacognition among persons with schizophrenia with a range of psychosocial outcomes including vocational functioning, empathy, motivation, self-evaluation, and other cognitive functions. This overview will highlight how these works allow for the quantitative study of processes which underpin alterations in self-experience in schizophrenia, which in turn allows self-experience to be studied as part of a larger set of brain-based and social phenomena whose interaction influences the trajectory of one's life and illness. We explore the hypothesis that metacognitive capacity, as a node in a larger biopsychosocial network, may be accessible by psychosocial treatment and, if successfully targeted, may disrupt the processes which perpetuate disability. Limitations and directions for future research are also discussed. Keywords: Metacognition, Recovery, Schizophrenia, Rehabilitation, Neurocognition, Insight