# Childhood trauma as a predictor of social cognition disturbances across psychosis spectrum: Data from the PREGAP Study

**Authors:** C. Aymerich, A. Catalan

PMC · DOI: 10.1192/j.eurpsy.2024.80 · 2024-08-27

## TL;DR

The study explores how childhood trauma affects social cognition in people with psychosis, those at risk for psychosis, and healthy individuals.

## Contribution

It investigates childhood trauma as a potential transdiagnostic marker for social cognition disturbances across the psychosis spectrum.

## Key findings

- Childhood trauma is linked to social cognition impairments in psychosis and at-risk groups.
- The study compares intra and inter-group differences using social cognition assessments.
- Findings may reveal trauma's role in social cognition across diagnostic boundaries.

## Abstract

Childhood trauma is a severe form of stress that has been strongly related to both the appearance of a psychotic disorder and the existance of social cognition disturbances. We hereby hypothesize childhood trauma might be a transdiagnostic marker of social cognition disturbances across the psychosis spectrum, regardless of the main diagnosis.

To investigate the effect of different forms of childhood trauma in social cognition impairments in first-episode psychosis, at-risk mental states for psychosis and healthy controls.

Using cross-sectional data, we will examine the relationship between different kinds of chidlhood trauma (measured with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, CTQ) and several social cognition domains, including facial emotion recognition, theory of mind (assessed using the Movie Assessment for Social Cognition, MASC, The Hinting Task, and the Faux-Pas Questionnaire). Intra and inter-group differences be studied for three study groups, including patients with first-episode psychosis (n=60), subjects with at-risk mental states for psychosis (n=60), and healthy controls (n=60).

None Declared

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** psychosis (MONDO:0005485)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11859600