Clinical and computational speech measures are associated with social cognition in schizophrenia spectrum disorders

被引:8
|
作者
Tang, Sunny X. [1 ]
Cong, Yan [1 ]
Nikzad, Amir H. [1 ]
Mehta, Aarush [1 ]
Cho, Sunghye [2 ]
Hansel, Katrin [3 ]
Berretta, Sarah [1 ]
Dhar, Aamina A. [1 ]
Kane, John M. [1 ]
Malhotra, Anil K. [1 ]
机构
[1] Zucker Hillside Hosp, Feinstein Inst Med Res, Dept Psychiat, 75-59 263rd St, Glen Oaks, NY 11004 USA
[2] Univ Penn, Linguist Data Consortium, 3600 Market St Suite 810, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Yale Univ, Dept Lab Med, 195 Church St, New Haven, CT 06510 USA
关键词
Schizophrenia; Language; Disorganization; Natural language processing; Social cognition; Computational psychiatry; LANGUAGE; COMMUNICATION; THOUGHT; PSYCHOSIS; RISK; LIFE;
D O I
10.1016/j.schres.2022.06.012
中图分类号
R749 [精神病学];
学科分类号
100205 ;
摘要
In this study, we compared three domains of social cognition (emotion processing, mentalizing, and attribution bias) to clinical and computational language measures in 63 participants with schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Based on the active inference model for discourse, we hypothesized that emotion processing and mentalizing, but not attribution bias, would be related to language disturbances. Clinical ratings for speech disturbance assessed disorganized and underproductive dimensions. Computational features included speech graph metrics, use of modal verbs, use of first-person pronouns, cosine similarity of adjacent utterances, and measures of sentiment; these were represented by four principal components. We found that higher clinical ratings for disorganized speech were predicted by greater impairments in both emotion processing and mentalizing, and that these relationships remained significant when accounting for demographic variables, overall psychosis symptoms, and verbal ability. Similarly, a computational speech component reflecting insular speech was consistently predicted by impairment in emotion processing. There were notable trends for computational speech components reflecting underproductive speech and decreased content-rich speech predicting mentalizing ability. Exploratory longitudinal analyses in a small subset of participants (n = 17) found that improvements in both emotion processing and mentalizing predicted improvements in disorganized speech. Attribution bias did not demonstrate strong relationships with language measures. Altogether, our findings are consistent with the active inference model of discourse and suggest greater emphasis on treatments that target social cognitive and language systems.
引用
收藏
页码:28 / 37
页数:10
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