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摘要
摘要
An examination of how people with schizophrenia understand and respond to their world. This volume amalgamates the work of distinguished pyschologists in Great Britain, Australia and the United States who have developed and tested social cognitive models of schizophrenia and sheds light on the development, course and outcome of schizophrenia.
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Schizophrenia is a mental disorder with cognitive and social components, aspects of which--according to Corrigan (Univ. of Chicago), Penn (Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill), and colleagues--can be understood and treated by examining how individuals with this disability interpret and respond to their perceived worlds. Adopting the perspective and techniques of social cognition allows researchers to move beyond biological accounts of schizophrenia by examining, for example, deficits in thought and how they affect social interaction (or the lack thereof). The book has 11 chapters written by a variety of scholars interested in the connections among social-cognitive, clinical, and psychiatric issues. An excellent overview chapter defines four basic approaches to the study of social cognition, profitably linking data and their implications for research on schizophrenia. The remaining chapters present various social cognitive concepts (e.g., stereotypes, causal attributions) and models (e.g., theories of mind, neurocognitive rehabilitation) developed for application in real-world settings. Too advanced for undergraduates, this edited volume will appeal to graduate students, teachers, and researchers in social and clinical psychology, respectively. Practitioners, too, will benefit from the new perspectives on theory and treatment of schizophrenia. D. S. Dunn Moravian College
目录
Contributors | p. xi |
Preface | p. xiii |
Acknowledgments | p. xvii |
Introduction: Framing Models of Social Cognition and Schizophrenia | p. 3 |
Part I Basic Theory and Concepts | |
1 What Is "Social Cognition"? Four Basic Approaches and Their Implications for Schizophrenia Research | p. 41 |
2 Social Perception in Schizophrenia | p. 73 |
3 Social Cognition and Social Functioning in Schizophrenia | p. 97 |
4 Social Cognition and Delusional Beliefs | p. 123 |
5 Theory of Mind and Schizophrenia | p. 149 |
6 Do Stereotype Threats Influence Social Cognitive Deficits in Schizophrenia? | p. 175 |
Part II Clinical Applications | |
7 Changing Causal Attributions | p. 195 |
8 Cognitive Rehabilitation for Schizophrenia: Enhancing Social Cognition by Strengthening Neurocognitive Functioning | p. 217 |
9 Cognitively Oriented Psychotherapy for Early Psychosis: Theory, Praxis, Outcomes, and Challenges | p. 249 |
10 Object-Relations and Reality-Testing Deficits in Schizophrenia | p. 285 |
Part III Future Directions | |
11 Social Cognition in Schizophrenia: Answered and Unanswered Questions | p. 315 |
Author Index | p. 327 |
Subject Index | p. 345 |
About the Editors | p. 353 |