Cella Matteo, Reeder Clare, Wykes Til
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London London, UK.
Front Psychol. 2015 Sep 1;6:1259. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01259. eCollection 2015.
The cognitive problems experienced by people with schizophrenia not only impede recovery but also interfere with treatments designed to improve overall functioning. Hence there has been a proliferation of new therapies to treat cognitive problems with the hope that improvements will benefit future intervention and recovery outcomes. Cognitive remediation therapy (CR) that relies on intensive task practice can support basic cognitive functioning but there is little evidence on how these therapies lead to transfer to real life skills. However, there is increasing evidence that CR including elements of transfer training (e.g., strategy use and problem solving schemas) produce higher functional outcomes. It is hypothesized that these therapies achieve higher transfer by improving metacognition. People with schizophrenia have metacognitive problems; these include poor self-awareness and difficulties in planning for complex tasks. This paper reviews this evidence as well as research on why metacognition needs to be explicitly taught as part of cognitive treatments. The evidence is based on research on learning spanning from neuroscience to the field of education. Learning programmes, and CRT, may be able to achieve better outcomes if they explicitly teach metacognition including metacognitive knowledge (i.e., awareness of the cognitive requirements and approaches to tasks) and metacognitive regulation (i.e., cognitive control over the different task relevant cognitive requirements). These types of metacognition are essential for successful task performance, in particular, for controlling effort, accuracy and efficient strategy use. We consider metacognition vital for the transfer of therapeutic gains to everyday life tasks making it a therapy target that may yield greater gains compared to cognition alone for recovery interventions.
精神分裂症患者所经历的认知问题不仅会阻碍康复,还会干扰旨在改善整体功能的治疗。因此,为治疗认知问题而出现了大量新疗法,希望这些改善能惠及未来的干预措施和康复结果。依赖密集任务练习的认知康复疗法(CR)可以支持基本认知功能,但几乎没有证据表明这些疗法如何能转化为现实生活技能。然而,越来越多的证据表明,包含转移训练元素(如策略运用和问题解决模式)的CR能产生更高的功能结果。据推测,这些疗法通过改善元认知实现了更高的迁移效果。精神分裂症患者存在元认知问题;这些问题包括自我意识差以及在为复杂任务制定计划方面存在困难。本文回顾了这方面的证据以及关于为何需要将元认知作为认知治疗的一部分进行明确教授的研究。这些证据基于从神经科学到教育领域的学习研究。如果学习计划和CRT能够明确教授元认知,包括元认知知识(即对任务的认知要求和方法的意识)和元认知调节(即对与任务相关的不同认知要求的认知控制),可能会取得更好的效果。这些类型的元认知对于成功完成任务至关重要,特别是对于控制努力程度、准确性和有效策略的运用。我们认为元认知对于将治疗效果转化为日常生活任务至关重要,使其成为一个治疗靶点,与仅针对认知进行康复干预相比,可能会带来更大的收益。