2016
DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2015-1679
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Two systems for empathy in obsessive-compulsive disorder: mentalizing and experience sharing

Abstract: Objective: To investigate empathic abilities in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) compared to control subjects. OCD is characterized by persistent obsessions and compulsions. Previous studies have proposed specific emotion recognition deficits in patients with OCD. The ability to recognize emotion is part of the broad construct of empathy that incorporates mentalizing and experience-sharing dimensions. Methods: Twenty-four subjects with a diagnosis of OCD and 23 control subjects underwent empat… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(27 citation statements)
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References 69 publications
(100 reference statements)
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“…Some of these studies find deficits in both affective and cognitive ToM (73,80) whereas in other studies deficits are limited to (social-)cognitive and higher-order domains (76,79). Yet other studies, however, show no clear deficits (36,47,74,77,78). The observed ToM deficits seem to depend in part on more general cognitive abilities (73,79), which is unsurprising as ToM tasks draw upon general cognitive and verbal abilities to a much greater extent than lower-level processes such as emotion recognition [see, e.g., (91)].…”
Section: Section Summary and Discussion: Mentalizing/tommentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Some of these studies find deficits in both affective and cognitive ToM (73,80) whereas in other studies deficits are limited to (social-)cognitive and higher-order domains (76,79). Yet other studies, however, show no clear deficits (36,47,74,77,78). The observed ToM deficits seem to depend in part on more general cognitive abilities (73,79), which is unsurprising as ToM tasks draw upon general cognitive and verbal abilities to a much greater extent than lower-level processes such as emotion recognition [see, e.g., (91)].…”
Section: Section Summary and Discussion: Mentalizing/tommentioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, ToM deficits in OCD do not seem to be explained by more general cognitive deficits alone (73,76), highlighting the importance of investigating social cognition in the disorder as a separate construct. While most studies do not indicate a significant relation between ToM and symptom severity (47,76,78,79), level of illness insight of patients does appear to be an important moderator of ToM deficits (73,75,80). Poor insight in OCD is associated with several clinical characteristics, such as higher comorbidity rates, specifically depression and schizophrenia spectrum disorders, poorer treatment response, more severe symptoms, and longer illness duration (92,93).…”
Section: Section Summary and Discussion: Mentalizing/tommentioning
confidence: 98%
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