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Examining differences in cognitive and affective theory of mind between persons with high and low extent of somatic symptoms: an experimental study

Examining differences in cognitive and affective theory of mind between persons with high and low extent of somatic symptoms: an experimental study
Examining differences in cognitive and affective theory of mind between persons with high and low extent of somatic symptoms: an experimental study
Background

Medically unexplained somatic symptoms are common, associated with disability and strongly related to depression and anxiety disorders. One interesting, but to date rarely tested, hypothesis is that deficits in both theory of mind (ToM) and emotional awareness may undergird the phenomenon of somatization. This study sought to investigate whether or not differences in ToM functioning and self-reported emotional awareness are associated with somatic symptoms in a sample from the general population.

Methods

The sample consisted of 50 healthy participants (37 females, 13 males) aged between 22 and 64 years (46.8 ± 11.7) of whom 29 reported a high extent of somatic symptoms (HSR), whereas 21 reported a low extent of somatic symptoms (LSR) based on the 30 highest and lowest percentiles of the Symptom List norms. The participants’ affective and cognitive ToM were assessed with two experimental paradigms by experimenters who were blind to the participants’ group membership. In addition, self-reports regarding emotional awareness, alexithymia, depressive and anxiety symptoms and current affect were collected.

Results

In the experimental tasks, HSR showed lower affective ToM than LSR but the groups did not differ in cognitive ToM. Although HSR reported lower emotional awareness than LSR in the self-report measure, this group difference vanished when we controlled for anxiety and depression. Depression, anxiety, emotional awareness and alexithymia were correlated positively.

Conclusions

The data supported the hypothesis that deficits in affective ToM are related to somatic symptoms. Neither cognitive ToM nor self-reported emotional awareness were associated with somatic symptoms. Self-reported emotional awareness, alexithymia and symptoms of depression and anxiety shared a considerable amount of variance.
Medically unexplained symptoms, Emotional awareness, Alexithymia, Theory of mind, Emotion recognition, Somatic symptoms
1471-244X
1-12
Preis, Mira A.
26b9bea8-0936-450e-80f4-0736834970ee
Golm, Dennis
ae337f61-561e-4d44-9cf3-3e5611c7b484
Kroener-Herwig, Birgit
6c9606d0-c252-4517-a7f8-ad769214ea25
Barke, Antonia
2ad464b5-5db1-42b3-b433-c04a9bd5612f
Preis, Mira A.
26b9bea8-0936-450e-80f4-0736834970ee
Golm, Dennis
ae337f61-561e-4d44-9cf3-3e5611c7b484
Kroener-Herwig, Birgit
6c9606d0-c252-4517-a7f8-ad769214ea25
Barke, Antonia
2ad464b5-5db1-42b3-b433-c04a9bd5612f

Preis, Mira A., Golm, Dennis, Kroener-Herwig, Birgit and Barke, Antonia (2017) Examining differences in cognitive and affective theory of mind between persons with high and low extent of somatic symptoms: an experimental study. BMC Psychiatry, 17 (200), 1-12. (doi:10.1186/s12888-017-1360-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Medically unexplained somatic symptoms are common, associated with disability and strongly related to depression and anxiety disorders. One interesting, but to date rarely tested, hypothesis is that deficits in both theory of mind (ToM) and emotional awareness may undergird the phenomenon of somatization. This study sought to investigate whether or not differences in ToM functioning and self-reported emotional awareness are associated with somatic symptoms in a sample from the general population.

Methods

The sample consisted of 50 healthy participants (37 females, 13 males) aged between 22 and 64 years (46.8 ± 11.7) of whom 29 reported a high extent of somatic symptoms (HSR), whereas 21 reported a low extent of somatic symptoms (LSR) based on the 30 highest and lowest percentiles of the Symptom List norms. The participants’ affective and cognitive ToM were assessed with two experimental paradigms by experimenters who were blind to the participants’ group membership. In addition, self-reports regarding emotional awareness, alexithymia, depressive and anxiety symptoms and current affect were collected.

Results

In the experimental tasks, HSR showed lower affective ToM than LSR but the groups did not differ in cognitive ToM. Although HSR reported lower emotional awareness than LSR in the self-report measure, this group difference vanished when we controlled for anxiety and depression. Depression, anxiety, emotional awareness and alexithymia were correlated positively.

Conclusions

The data supported the hypothesis that deficits in affective ToM are related to somatic symptoms. Neither cognitive ToM nor self-reported emotional awareness were associated with somatic symptoms. Self-reported emotional awareness, alexithymia and symptoms of depression and anxiety shared a considerable amount of variance.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 17 May 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 May 2017
Published date: 30 May 2017
Keywords: Medically unexplained symptoms, Emotional awareness, Alexithymia, Theory of mind, Emotion recognition, Somatic symptoms

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 424378
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424378
ISSN: 1471-244X
PURE UUID: ec4e3e62-8ed0-4f21-8d32-95726e4e9a30
ORCID for Dennis Golm: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2950-7935

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:36
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Mira A. Preis
Author: Dennis Golm ORCID iD
Author: Birgit Kroener-Herwig
Author: Antonia Barke

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