Abstract
Efforts to use cognitive remediation in psychosocial intervention for schizophrenia have increasingly incorporated social cognition as a treatment target. A distinction can be made in this work between “broad-based” interventions, which integrate social cognitive training within a multicomponent suite of intervention techniques and “targeted” interventions; which aim to enhance social cognition alone. Targeted interventions have the potential advantage of being more efficient than broad-based interventions; however, they also face difficult challenges. In particular, targeted interventions may be less likely to achieve maintenance and generalization of gains made in treatment. A novel potential solution to this problem is described which draws on the social psychological literature on social cognition.
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CITATION STYLE
Roberts, D. L., & Velligan, D. I. (2012). Can Social Functioning in Schizophrenia Be Improved through Targeted Social Cognitive Intervention? Rehabilitation Research and Practice, 2012, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/742106
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