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Relationship between Executive Functions, Social Cognition, and Attachment State of Mind in Adolescence: An Explorative Study.

Riccardo WilliamsSilvia AndreassiMarta MoselliFiorella FantiniAnnalisa TanzilliVittorio LingiardiFiorenzo Laghi
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
Advancements in the complexity of self-other representations and mentalization of interpersonal exchanges significantly occurs in the passage from pre-adolescence to adolescence and seem to be promoted by increased performances in executive control and cognitive shifting. Dismissing state of mind with respect to attachment is associated with lower development of social understanding in adolescence. The neurocognitive reorganization that underlies the passage from pre-adolescence to adolescence seems to provide the scaffolding for more sophisticated interpretations of the social world. Past and current affective experience can boost or hinder the full deployment of such human maturational potential. Given the importance of social cognition for adjustment and psychopathology, clinical intervention should target the amelioration of individual and family abilities in social reasoning and mentalization.
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