Abstract

The present work investigated the efficacy of social cognition and interaction training (SCIT) for patients with major depression. Thirty first-episode patients with major depression who received the SCIT plus the treatment-as-usual (i.e., SCIT + TAU group) were compared with twenty-nine patients who only received treatment-as-usual (i.e., TAU group). Patients received SCIT showed a significantly greater improvement on emotion perception, theory of mind, and attributional styles from baseline to follow-up assessments, with a significant reduction of severity of depressive symptoms, compared to those in TAU group. The preliminary findings indicate that SCIT is a feasible and promising method to improve social cognition for patients with major depression.

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