Aggressive behavior and metacognitive functions: A longitudinal study on patients with mental disorders
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
Background: Metacognitive functions play a key role in understanding which psychological variables underlying the personality might lead a person with a severe mental disorder to commit violent acts against others. The aims of this study were to: (a) investigate the differences between patients with poor metacognitive functioning (PM group) and patients with good metacognitive functioning (GM group) in relation to a history of violence; (b) investigate the differences between the two groups in relation to aggressive behavior during a 1-year follow-up; and (c) analyze the predictors of aggressive behavior. Methods: In a prospective cohort study, patients with severe mental disorders with and without a lifetime history of serious violence were assessed with a large set of standardized instruments and were evaluated bi-monthly with MOAS in order to monitor any aggressive behavior. The total sample included 180 patients: 56% outpatients and 44% inpatients, and the majority were male (75%) with a mean age of 44 (± 9.8) years, and half of them had a history of violence. The sample was split into two groups: poor metacognition (PM) group and good metacognition (GM) group, according to MAI evaluation scores. Results: The PM patients reported a history of violence more frequently than GM patients, during the 1-year follow-up, but no differences between groups in aggressive and violent behavior were found. The strongest predictors of aggressive behavior were: borderline and passive-aggressive personality traits and a history of violence, anger, and hostility. The metacognitive functions alone did not predict aggressive behavior, but metacognitive functions interacted with hostility and angry reactions in predicting aggressive behavior. Conclusions: This study led to some important conclusions: (a) some aspects closely related to violence are predictive of aggressive behavior only in patients with poor metacognition, thus good metacognition is a protective factor; (b) poor metacognition is associated with a history of violence, which in turn increases the risk of committing aggressive behavior.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Aggressive behavior; Internal mental states; Mental disorders; Metacognition; Risk of violence
Elenco autori:
Candini, V.; Ghisi, M.; Bianconi, G.; Bulgari, V.; Carcione, A.; Cavalera, C.; Conte, G.; Cricelli, M.; Ferla, M. T.; Ferrari, C.; Iozzino, L.; Macis, A.; Nicolo, G.; Stefana, A.; Stefana, A.; De Girolamo, G.; Barlati, Stefano; Assunta, Martinazzoli; Giuliana, Mina; Roberta, Paleari; Francesco, Restaino; Bruno, Travasso; Vita, Antonio
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