TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating the relationship between negative symptoms and metacognitive functioning in psychosis
T2 - An individual participant data meta-analysis
AU - McGuire, Nicola
AU - Gumley, Andrew
AU - Hasson-Ohayon, Ilanit
AU - Allan, Stephanie
AU - Aunjitsakul, Warut
AU - Aydin, Orkun
AU - Bo, Sune
AU - Bonfils, Kelsey A.
AU - Bröcker, Anna Lena
AU - de Jong, Steven
AU - Dimaggio, Giancarlo
AU - Inchausti, Felix
AU - Jansen, Jens Einar
AU - Lecomte, Tania
AU - Luther, Lauren
AU - MacBeth, Angus
AU - Montag, Christiane
AU - Pedersen, Marlene Buch
AU - Pijnenborg, Gerdina Henrika Maria
AU - Popolo, Raffaele
AU - Schwannauer, Matthias
AU - Trauelsen, Anne Marie
AU - van Donkersgoed, Rozanne
AU - Wu, Weiming
AU - Wang, Kai
AU - Lysaker, Paul H.
AU - McLeod, Hamish
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Authors. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Psychological Society.
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - Purpose: Negative symptoms are a persistent, yet under-explored problem in psychosis. Disturbances in metacognition are a potential causal factor in negative symptom development and maintenance. This meta-analysis uses individual participant data (IPD) from existing research to assess the relationship between negative symptoms and metacognition treated as summed scores and domains. Methods: Data sets containing individuals with negative symptoms and metacognition data, aged 16+ with psychosis, were identified according to pre-specific parameters. IPD integrity and completeness were checked and data were synthesized in two-stage meta-analyses of each negative symptoms cluster compared with metacognition in seemingly unrelated regression using restricted maximum likelihood estimation. Planned and exploratory sensitivity analyses were also conducted. Results: Thirty-three eligible data sets were identified with 21 with sufficient similarity and availability to be included in meta-analyses, corresponding to 1301 participants. The strongest relationships observed were between summed scores of negative symptoms and metacognition. Metacognitive domains of self-reflectivity and understanding others' minds, and expressive negative symptoms emerged as significant in some meta-analyses. The uncertainty of several effect estimates increased significantly when controlling for covariates. Conclusions: This robust meta-analysis highlights the impact of using summed versus domain-specific scores of metacognition and negative symptoms, and relationships are not as clear-cut as once believed. Findings support arguments for further differentiation of negative symptom profiles and continued granular exploration of the relationship between metacognition and negative symptoms.
AB - Purpose: Negative symptoms are a persistent, yet under-explored problem in psychosis. Disturbances in metacognition are a potential causal factor in negative symptom development and maintenance. This meta-analysis uses individual participant data (IPD) from existing research to assess the relationship between negative symptoms and metacognition treated as summed scores and domains. Methods: Data sets containing individuals with negative symptoms and metacognition data, aged 16+ with psychosis, were identified according to pre-specific parameters. IPD integrity and completeness were checked and data were synthesized in two-stage meta-analyses of each negative symptoms cluster compared with metacognition in seemingly unrelated regression using restricted maximum likelihood estimation. Planned and exploratory sensitivity analyses were also conducted. Results: Thirty-three eligible data sets were identified with 21 with sufficient similarity and availability to be included in meta-analyses, corresponding to 1301 participants. The strongest relationships observed were between summed scores of negative symptoms and metacognition. Metacognitive domains of self-reflectivity and understanding others' minds, and expressive negative symptoms emerged as significant in some meta-analyses. The uncertainty of several effect estimates increased significantly when controlling for covariates. Conclusions: This robust meta-analysis highlights the impact of using summed versus domain-specific scores of metacognition and negative symptoms, and relationships are not as clear-cut as once believed. Findings support arguments for further differentiation of negative symptom profiles and continued granular exploration of the relationship between metacognition and negative symptoms.
KW - anhedonia
KW - apathy
KW - metacognition
KW - psychosis
KW - schizophrenia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85166653839&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1111/papt.12484
DO - https://doi.org/10.1111/papt.12484
M3 - مقالة مرجعية
C2 - 37530433
SN - 1476-0835
VL - 96
SP - 918
EP - 933
JO - Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice
JF - Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice
IS - 4
ER -