Abstract

IntroductionTheory of Mind (ToM) is a key component of social cognition. Recently the Short Story Task (SST) was developed as a new measurement of ToM. SST uses a short story of Ernest Hemingway to assess ToM skills. SST proved to be a suitable tool, and sensitive to individual differences among healthy subjects. Our aim was to test SST to evaluate the ToM skills of persons with schizophrenia.Materials and MethodsSST was used to assess ToM skills. After reading the short story “The End of Something” a structured interview was done with 14 questions. Spontaneous mental state reasoning, explicit mental state inference and comprehension of nonmental aspects of the story were evaluated. 47 persons with schizophrenia in remission and 48 healthy controls were assessed and compared.ResultsPersons with schizophrenia performed significantly more poorly in the explicit mental state inference questions. Ceiling effect was not detectable in explicit ToM scores. Patients made less spontaneous mental state references as well, although the occurrence of spontaneous mental state terms was infrequent in both groups. Patients were also less accurate in answering comprehension questions, but the difference was not significant after Bonferroni correction.DiscussionOur results lined up with the original findings and we found SST to be a sensitive tool to explore the individual differences in ToM performance, not only among healthy subjects, but also among persons with schizophrenia especially in explicit mental state inferences without observing the ceiling effect. We found, however, SST to be less sensitive to measure spontaneous mental state reasoning and also the lack of the use of another ToM test to assess convergent validity of SST for indicating ToM deficits in schizophrenia stands as a limitation of current study.

Highlights

  • Theory of Mind (ToM) is a key component of social cognition

  • The spontaneous ToM activity is tested with animated geometric forms stimuli, and measured by multiple choice questions [8, 10, 11], or with question not directly asking the subject to reflect upon mental states [7]

  • While examining the control group (CG) in the same field we found that the data was close to the normal distribution with negative kurtosis, which is flatter than the normal curve

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Summary

Introduction

Theory of Mind (ToM) is a key component of social cognition. Recently the Short Story Task (SST) was developed as a new measurement of ToM. The spontaneous ToM activity is tested with animated geometric forms stimuli, and measured by multiple choice questions [8, 10, 11], or with question not directly asking the subject to reflect upon mental states [7]. These types of ToM tasks are used as indirect measures of verbal mental state attribution indexed by the spontaneous use of mental-state language [7] (e.g. feels, thinks, wonders, furious, anxious, etc.) in tasks when the participants are not cued (unlike in explicit ToM tasks), and responses are spontaneous [1, 7]

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