Social Cognition Deficits and Associations with Drinking History in Alcoholic Men and Women

Background Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of a social cognition factor as an element of general cognition in healthy control and clinical populations. Recently developed measures of social cognition include the social perception and faces subtests of the Wechsler Advanced Clinical S...

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Published inAlcoholism, clinical and experimental research Vol. 38; no. 12; pp. 2998 - 3007
Main Authors Valmas, Mary M., Mosher Ruiz, Susan, Gansler, David A., Sawyer, Kayle S., Oscar-Berman, Marlene
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.12.2014
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
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Summary:Background Previous studies have demonstrated the presence of a social cognition factor as an element of general cognition in healthy control and clinical populations. Recently developed measures of social cognition include the social perception and faces subtests of the Wechsler Advanced Clinical Solutions (ACS) Social Cognition module. While these measures have been validated on various clinical samples, they have not been studied in alcoholics. Alcoholism has been associated with emotional abnormalities and diminished social cognitive functioning as well as neuropathology of brain areas underlying social processing abilities. We used the ACS Social Perception and Faces subtests to assess alcoholism‐related impairments in social cognition. Methods Social cognitive functioning was assessed in 77 abstinent alcoholic individuals (37 women) and 59 nonalcoholic control participants (29 women), using measures of the ACS Social Cognition module and subtests of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale‐Fourth Edition (WAIS‐IV) that contain a social cognition component (Picture Completion and Comprehension). Group and gender differences in ACS and WAIS‐IV performance were assessed, as well as relationships between measures of alcoholism severity and social cognitive functioning. Results Alcoholics performed significantly worse than nonalcoholics on the ACS measures of Affect Naming and Faces Content. Alcoholic men were impaired relative to alcoholic women on Prosody Face Matching and Faces Content scores. Among alcoholics, longer durations of heavy drinking were associated with poorer performance on Affect Naming, and a greater number of daily drinks were associated with lower Prosody Face Matching performance. For alcoholic women, a longer duration of abstinence was associated with better performance on Affect Naming. Conclusions Alcoholic men and women showed different patterns of associations between alcoholism indices and clinically validated social cognition assessments. These findings extend into the social cognition domain, previous literature demonstrating the presence of cognitive deficits in alcoholism, their association with alcoholism severity, and variability by gender. Moreover, because impairments in social cognition can persist despite extended abstinence, they have important implications for relapse prevention.
Bibliography:Medical Research Service of the US Department of Veterans Affairs
istex:651276CBE3770EBBE00D424E2A87B6ACCBBA46FA
National Institutes of Health
ArticleID:ACER12566
ark:/67375/WNG-3VK6FH3X-S
NIAAA - No. R01-AA07112; No. K05-AA00219
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:0145-6008
1530-0277
DOI:10.1111/acer.12566