Further angles to this story: Time consumption in mind-reading, psychosis risk and phenomenology of social cognition

Our everyday, pragmatic immersion in the social world strongly relies on a series of face to-face encounters with others, whose mental states are seamlessly disclosed to us in the immediacy of such interaction. This is why the recent study by Zhang et al. (2017) is so informative, particularly for the purpose of enriching our understanding of social cognition in early psychosis. The study focuses on a feature which is rather familiar to any clinician dealing with the field of early detection: clinical high risk (CHR) and schizophrenia (Sz) subjects, spend considerably more time (i.e.
Source: Schizophrenia Research - Category: Psychiatry Authors: Tags: Letter to the Editor Source Type: research