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Child Neuropsychology
A Journal on Normal and Abnormal Development in Childhood and Adolescence
Volume 19, 2013 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Ongoing development of social cognition in adolescence

, , , &
Pages 615-629 | Received 28 Mar 2012, Accepted 28 Jul 2012, Published online: 31 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

Age differences in social cognition between adolescents and young adults were investigated. Two large groups of adolescents and young adults were given tasks of theory of mind and emotion recognition. In addition, to control for possibly related basic cognitive development, working memory, speed of processing, and verbal ability were assessed. A strong age effect was revealed across both measures of social cognition. Adolescents performed with a lower accuracy than adults. Further analyses indicated that those age differences remained significant even after controlling for basic cognitive abilities. Exploratory analyses indicated no influence of pubertal phase on social cognition. Results suggest ongoing development of social cognition across adolescence, independent of individual differences in more basic cognitive abilities.

Notes

1Analyses on the subgroup of female participants only also revealed a significant age group difference on both measures of social cognition.

2 Even when controlling for age, there was no significant influence of pubertal stage on both measures of social cognition.

Figure 2 Accuracy for pubertal clusters on the Eyes test.

Note. Prepubertal adolescents: n = 9; pubertal adolescents: n = 18; and postpubertal adolescents: n = 33. Error bars denote SEM.
Figure 2 Accuracy for pubertal clusters on the Eyes test.

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