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Social cognition impairments may be associated with poor functional outcomes, symptoms, and disability in social anxiety disorder (SAD) and generalized anxiety disorder (GAD). This meta-analysis aims to determine if emotion recognition and theory of mind (ToM) are impaired in SAD or GAD compared to healthy controls. A systematic review was conducted in electronic databases (PubMed, PsycNet, and Web of Science) to retrieve studies assessing emotion recognition and/or ToM in patients with SAD or GAD, compared to healthy controls, up to March 2022. Meta-analyses using random-effects models were conducted. We identified 21 eligible studies: 13 reported emotion recognition and 10 ToM outcomes, with 585 SAD patients, 178 GAD patients, and 753 controls. Compared to controls, patients with SAD exhibited impairments in emotion recognition (SMD = −0.32, CI = −0.47 – −0.16, z = −3.97, p 0.0001) and ToM (SMD = −0.44, CI = −0.83 –0.04, z = −2.18, p 0.01). Results for GAD were inconclusive due to the limited number of studies meeting the inclusion criteria (two for each domain). Relevant demographic and clinical variables (age, sex, education level, and anxiety scores) were not significantly correlated with emotion recognition or ToM impairments in SAD and GAD. Further studies employing ecological measures with larger and homogenous samples are needed to better delineate the factors influencing social cognition outcomes in both SAD and GAD.
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Sandra Báez
Universidad de Los Andes
María Alejandra Tangarife
Universidad de Los Andes
Gabriela Davila-Mejia
Universidad de Los Andes
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Universidad de Los Andes
Universidad Antonio Nariño
Fundación Universitaria del Área Andina
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Báez et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1ff1590a77fb36002e51a9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1192683