Abstract

Recent advances suggest that impairment in social cognition (SC) may play a role in the development of social anxiety (SA). However, very few studies have analyzed whether SA fosters poorer social-cognitive development as it leads to social avoidance. This study aimed to analyze whether retrospectively assessed behavioral inhibition (BI) (i.e., an early form of SA) in childhood is associated with a deficit in social cognition operationalized as impairment of mentalizing (MZ) in adolescence. A sample of 256 adolescents (range: 12–18 years; mean age: 14.7 years; SD = 1.7) from general population were assessed for MZ capacities and retrospective BI through self-report and interview measures. Results comparing three groups of adolescents with different levels of childhood BI (low, moderate or high) and controlling for concurrent SA and depression reveal that the higher the level of BI, the lower the level of MZ. These results were consistent for almost all mentalization measures, including when both extreme (i.e., high vs. low BI) and non-extreme (i.e., high vs. moderate BI) were compared in both self-report and interview measures and in both dimensions of MZ (i.e., MZ referred to others’ and to own mental states). These findings support that childhood forms of SA are associated to deficit in SC in adolescence. A possible bi-directional relationship between SA and SC, and the role that it may play in the pathway to clinical SA are discussed.

Highlights

  • Social cognition refers to the perception, interpretation, and processing of all information relating to a person’s social environment and relationships [1]

  • Childhood behavioral inhibition is associated with impaired mentalizing with the only exception of the measure of MZ deficit provided by the Mentalization Questionnaire (MZQ), these results suggest that a high level of BI in childhood is associated to impaired MZ capacities in adolescence when compared to low level of BI

  • The first aim of the current study was to analyze whether retrospectively reported BI in childhood, which is considered an early form of social anxiety (SA) [41,55], is associated with impaired MZ capacity in adolescence

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Summary

Introduction

Social cognition refers to the perception, interpretation, and processing of all information relating to a person’s social environment and relationships [1]. The historical interest in how humans are aware of one’s own and others’ mental states is patent in the number of approaches that its study has produced. Constructs such as social intelligence [2], metacognition [3], Theory of Mind (ToM) [4], mind-blindness [5], inter and intra-personal intelligences [6], emotional intelligence [7] and others The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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