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Affective and cognitive theory of mind in posttraumatic stress, major depressive, and somatic symptom disorders: Association with childhood trauma.

Katja I SeitzNicola EhlerMarius SchmitzSara E SchmitzIsabel DziobekSabine C HerpertzKatja Bertsch
Published in: The British journal of clinical psychology (2022)
Our results suggest that individuals with a history of severe childhood trauma, at least or particularly with a clinical diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder, may benefit from therapeutic approaches targeting theory of mind capacities. Our findings indicate that higher levels of childhood trauma may be linked to a specific 'hypermentalizing' bias in somatic symptom disorder. Our findings further point towards an association between higher levels of childhood trauma and a heightened - rather than a diminished - sensitivity towards interpersonal cues in major depressive disorder. Provided further confirmatory evidence, our findings may support diagnosis-specific approaches in ameliorating theory of mind abilities in individuals with different mental disorders and a history of severe childhood trauma.
Keyphrases
  • major depressive disorder
  • bipolar disorder
  • trauma patients
  • early life
  • posttraumatic stress disorder
  • childhood cancer
  • early onset
  • copy number
  • drug induced
  • patient reported