Pilot study on the effectiveness of the socialmind program for the rehabilitation of social cognition following acquired brain injury
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rivas García, Sandra María; García-Bermúdez, Olga; Catena Martínez, Andrés; Caracuel Romero, AlfonsoEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
rehabilitation intervention social cognition
Fecha
2024-07-17Referencia bibliográfica
Rivas García, S.M. et. al. Front. Psychol. 15:1338335. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1338335]
Patrocinador
FPU16/03165 grant from the Spanish Ministry of Education; University of Cádiz, Spain and the University of Granada, SpainResumen
Background: People with acquired brain injury (ABI) often have Social Cognition
(SC) deficits. Impairment of SC causes the individual to have difficulties in daily
functioning and can lead to social isolation. Research aimed at rehabilitation
of SC in individuals with ABI is scarce and almost always addresses only one
component of this ability.
Objective: This pilot study aimed to assess the effectiveness of the
new “SocialMind” program in improving all core components of SC in
people with ABI.
Method: The study included 31 participants with ABI, divided into experimental
and control groups. The study spanned 44 weeks, involving an initial meeting,
evaluation, training, and final assessment phases. The SocialMind program,
structured into four modules, each with a duration of 30 h, targeted each
SC component through tailored exercises. The program addressed emotion
recognition, social awareness, ToM, and empathy.
Results: The SocialMind group demonstrated significant improvements in
emotion recognition (p = 0.017), social knowledge (p < 0.001), and empathy
(p = 0.001) compared to the control group. ToM also showed a notable
improvement that approached significance (p = 0.057).
Conclusion: This pilot study suggests that the SocialMind program effectively
enhances three of the four core components of SC in individuals with ABI.