Recent studies stress the persistence of cognitive deficits
1 as well as social behavioral disturbances
2 in the euthymic state of bipolar disorder. However, there is a paucity of experimental reports on these patients’ social cognition abilities and their underlying mechanism. Two basic aspects of social cognition include the ability to empathize and the ability to mentalize about other people’s mental states. Empathy is broadly defined as our reaction to the observed experiences of others.
3 While some investigators have emphasized empathy as the ability to engage in the cognitive process of adopting another’s psychological perspective or point of view ("cognitive empathy"), others have stressed its emotional facets ("affective empathy"), referring to the capacity to experience a vicarious response to another person.
4 Although impaired empathy is considered to be a central characteristic of several psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia
5 and autism,
6 the cognitive and empathic abilities of bipolar disorder patients have never before been examined. Our study aimed to characterize empathic abilities of euthymic bipolar disorder patients.
Another ability related to empathy is "Theory of Mind," which can be defined as the ability to understand the feelings, intentions, and motivations of others.
7 Currently there is a lack of a clear distinction between empathy and the theory of mind concept, leading some researchers to use these terms interchangeably.
6,
8 It appears that theory of mind is roughly equivalent to cognitive empathy, but not to "affective empathy."
Recent findings indicate that an impaired theory of mind may account for the aberrant social behaviors exhibited by bipolar disorder.
9,
10 Kerr et al.
11 reported impairment in performance on first- and second-order theory of mind tasks in bipolar depressive and bipolar manic patients, but not in remitted patients. However, more recently, Bora et al.
12 proposed that even euthymic bipolar disorder patients may be impaired in advanced theory of mind tasks.
We have recently suggested that, similar to empathy, theory of mind could also be divided into cognitive and affective components.
13 It was assumed that while "cognitive theory of mind" refers to our ability to make inferences regarding other people’s beliefs, "affective theory of mind" refers to the inferences one makes regarding others’ emotions. While "cognitive theory of mind" is very similar to "cognitive empathy," "affective theory of mind" may be related to both cognitive and affective empathy. It appears that the centrality of emotion distinguishes between the affective and cognitive aspects of empathy and theory of mind.
Cognitive empathy has been shown to depend on intact ventromedial prefrontal cortical functioning.
14 Interestingly, ventromedial prefrontal cortical dysfunction has been reported in bipolar disorder.
15 Furthermore, recent research indicates that many of the core features of bipolar disorder overlap with those known to characterize frontal lobe syndrome.
16 Additionally, it has been suggested that bipolar disorder patients show impairment in frontal neurocognitive tasks that involve cognitive flexibility.
17 On the other hand, the neuroanatomical basis of affective empathy is largely unknown and could relate to more limbic structure function such as the amygdala.
18 Thus, we hypothesized that euthymic bipolar disorder patients would show impaired cognitive empathy while showing preserved affective empathy.
To date, there have been no studies looking at the relationship between either cognitive or affective empathy and cognitive and affective theory of mind, leaving unsettled whether these terms are equivalent or not. Therefore, to more fully understand the nature of empathy in bipolar disorder, the relationship between empathy and theory of mind was also examined. Additionally it was hypothesized that impaired cognitive empathy in bipolar disorder would be related to performance on cognitive flexibility tasks that assess prefrontal cortical functioning.
Nineteen patients (10 males, 9 females) diagnosed with bipolar disorder were recruited from new admissions to the affective disorder program in the Shalvata Mental Health Center. Remission criteria for bipolar disorder patients (euthymia) were defined as a rating of ≤9 on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D); ≤7 on the Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS); and a self-report by the patient and confirmation by at least one family member that the patient was in remission (Table 1).
The inclusion criteria for patients were ages between 18 and 60 years; stable medication intake during the preceding month (as confirmed by the clinical staff and/or a family member); DSM-IV diagnosis of bipolar disorder, and monitoring of blood levels of mood stabilizers. The exclusion criteria were any acute, unstable, significant, or untreated medical illness, neurological disorders, mental retardation, and current drug abuse. Bipolar disorder patients were excluded if they had been diagnosed as having a psychotic episode or other axis I diagnosis of mental disorder for the index episode. Two bipolar disorder patients had a comorbid personality disorder: one an adjustment disorder and the other a borderline personality disorder. Only patients with bipolar I disorder and with no history of psychosis were included. All bipolar disorder patients were receiving psychiatric medication, mainly mood stabilizers (nine patients taking lithium, six patients taking carbamazepine, four patients taking sodium valproate). The blood levels of the mood stabilizers for all patients were within the therapeutic range: lithium 0.5—1.2 nmol/liter, carbamazepine 6—10 mg/liter, and sodium valproate 60—100 mg/liter. Only outpatients were included in the sample.
Twenty age- and gender-matched healthy comparison volunteers (11 men, 9 women) were recruited by advertisement. The healthy comparison subjects had no known psychiatric or current drug/alcohol problem (according to the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR). They also denied having any first-degree relatives with a psychiatric history (self-report).
The study was conducted in accordance with the local institutional review board committee. Study candidates were given a detailed description of the study and signed a written informed consent. One patient refused to complete the theory of mind task.
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Assessment of Empathic Abilities
The cognitive and affective aspects of empathic abilities were assessed using the Interpersonal Reactive Index.
3 The Interpersonal Reactive Index includes four seven-item subscales, each tapping a different aspect of empathy
3: (a) the perspective taking subscale, which measures the reported tendency to adopt spontaneously the psychological point of view of others; (b) the fantasy subscale, measuring the tendency to imaginatively transpose oneself into fictional situations; (c) the empathic concern scale, measuring the tendency to experience feelings of sympathy and compassion for others; and (d) the personal distress scale assesses the tendency to experience distress and discomfort in response to others’ observed distress. The scales have previously been adapted to Hebrew and validated with Hebrew speaking Israeli population. Scoring ranged from −2 to +2 for each item.
It has been suggested that while the perspective-taking subscale of the Interpersonal Reactive Index clearly assesses cognitive empathy, the personal distress scale taps prominently affective empathy. Reliability analysis (split-half reliability), in the present study, of the scales yielded high reliability coefficients for both the cognitive scale (α=0.79) and for the affective empathy scale (α=0.82).
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Assessment of Cognitive and Affective Theory of Mind
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Understanding "Faux Pas"
A faux pas occurs when a speaker says something without considering that the listener might not want to hear it or may be hurt by what has been said. Detection of a faux pas requires both an understanding that there might be a difference between a speaker’s knowledge state (cognitive theory of mind) and that of the listener, and an appreciation of the emotional impact of a statement on the listener (affective theory of mind).
To evaluate the ability of participants to recognize a social faux pas, we used a Hebrew version of a task designed by Baron-Cohen et al.
19 consisting of 20 stories presented in random order. A faux pas occurred in 10 of them, while the remaining 10 served as control stories. Participants were then asked theory of mind questions and control questions (tapping story comprehension).
The score for every item (error score) was divided into two components. Each error received a −1 score. The "Recognition of Faux Pas" component consisted of the score of the first two questions ("Did someone say something he should not have said?" "Who said it?"). The reliability (split-half reliability) of this component was high (α=0.96). In the 10 control stories, the correct answer to the first question was "no" and no further questions were asked if answered correctly. If participant answered "yes," this item would be scored as "false alarm" and get error scores for each wrong answer. The second, "Understanding of Faux Pas" (reliability, α=0.86), referred to the subject’s ability to understand exactly what went wrong in the story by answering two other questions: an affective theory of mind question ("What was wrong with what that person said?") and cognitive theory of mind question ("Why did she say it?"). In both components, the scores were calculated based on the number of errors that subjects had on both test and control items. The control items were not included in the final scoring and were only used as distracters and for exclusions of subjects with major cognitive disabilities. No subject in the sample was excluded due to impaired performance in these control items.
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Recognition of Basic versus Social Eye Expressions
This computerized task was designed to assess the ability to recognize basic emotions versus social emotions. The test consists of 52 photographs of eyes showing six basic emotions taken from Ekman and Friesen
20: happy, sad, afraid, surprised, distressed, disgusted, and angry (reliability of this classification was good, α=0.61). The reliability (split-half reliability) of this component was high (α=0.96). The test also showed seven "social emotions" (reliability α=0.49) based on Baron-Cohen et al.
21: interested, worried, confident, fantasizing, preoccupied, friendly, and suspicious. Two words were printed at the bottom of each picture stimulus, with one word describing the correct emotion expressed in the eyes and the other a distracter. Correct and incorrect responses were scored as 1 and 0, respectively. A total mean score for the basic and social emotions scores was calculated.
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Neurocognitive Assessment of Prefrontal Cortical Functioning
Participants were administered subsets from the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB), a computer-administered nonverbal battery of tasks designed to examine specific aspects of cognition, associated particularly with prefrontal cortical functioning.
22
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Cognitive Flexibility: The ID/ED Shifting Task
This task assesses subject’s ability to attend to the specific attributes of compound stimuli (rule acquisition) and to shift that attention when required. Two artificial dimensions and two stimuli are displayed, initially each of only one dimension. These shifts are initially intradimensional, then later extradimensional (ID/ED). The task involves simple shifts as well as reversal. This test was associated to the prefrontal cortex. Specifically, dorsolateral prefrontal cortical was related to extradimensional shifts stages (stage 8)
23 while reversal stages (stage 7-simple reversal and stage 9 extradimensional reversal) were associated with the orbitofrontal/ventromedial prefrontal region.
24 Using the method administered by Ozonoff et al.,
25 when participants failed to achieve criterion (six consecutive correct responses) at a given stage, the test was failed and the maximum number of errors (25) and trials (50) was recorded for all subsequent stages not administered (reliability of the stages was 0.552).
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Planning: The Stockings of Cambridge Task
A spatial planning test based upon the Tower of London test. The subject is shown two displays containing three colored balls. In each trial, the subject must move the balls in the lower display to copy the pattern shown in the upper. A later motor control task, in which the subject simply copies earlier moves, allows planning time to be calculated (reliability, α=0.788). Among other regions, this test is strongly associated with the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex.
26
The bipolar disorder and the healthy comparison groups did not differ in age (t =−1.94, df=37, n.s.) or years of education (t=0.44, df=37, n.s.).
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Cognitive and Affective Empathy
Bipolar disorder patients had significantly lower scores on the cognitive empathy subscale (perspective-taking), (t=2.102, df=37, p=0.042). However, patients scored significantly higher than controls on the affective empathy subscale (personal distress) (t=−2.059, df=37, p=0.047). No significant differences were observed in the empathic concern (t=−1.561, df=37, n.s.) and fantasy scale (t=−0.494, df=37, n.s).
To examine the interaction between group (bipolar disorder patients, comparison subjects) and empathy subtype (cognitive, affective), a repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) (empathy subtype, with group as between-subjects factor) was conducted with the cognitive (perspective-taking) and affective (fantasy scale) scales. As observed in Figure 1
, this analysis revealed a significant type effect (F =15.460, df=1, 37, p=0.0001), a significant group-by-type interaction effect (F=7.164, df= 1, 37, p=0.011), and a nonsignificant group effect (F=0.001, df=1, 37, n.s.). This suggested that the pattern of performance in the cognitive and affective empathy scores was significantly different between the two groups: whereas cognitive empathy was higher in healthy comparison subjects, bipolar patients showed a trend toward higher emotional empathy.
To rule out the possibility that different medication type affected the results, we divided the patient group into three groups according to their medications (nine patients taking lithium, six patients taking carbamazepine, four patients taking sodium valproate). One-way ANOVA indicated that the subgroups of patients did not differ in their cognitive (F=3.131, df=2, 16, n.s.) or affective empathy (F=0.690, df=2, 16, n.s.).
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Cognitive and Affective Faux Pas
In order to compare the cognitive and affective theory of mind scores of patients and comparison subjects, independent sample t tests were conducted for recognition of faux pas, as well as cognitive and affective understanding of faux pas. Significant differences were evident in the cognitive faux pas variable (t=−3.502, df=36, p=0.001), with better performance of the healthy comparison subjects than the bipolar disorder group. Interestingly, no significant differences between the healthy comparison subjects and the bipolar patients were found in the affective faux pas scores (t=1.531, df=36, n.s.) in the "false alarm" scores (t=1.531, df=36, n.s.) or in the recognition of faux pas (t=1.676, df=36, n.s.).
A repeated measures ANOVA was conducted, with type (affective versus cognitive theory of mind) as the within-subjects factor and group as the between-subjects factor. As observed in Figure 2
, this analysis revealed a significant group effect (F=6.649, df=1, 36, p=0.014) and a significant type effect (F=17.805, df=1, 36, p=0.0001), indicating significant differences in performance between groups and between types (cognitive, affective) of theory of mind. A significant group-by-type interaction effect (F=11.910, df=1, 36, p=0.001) was found, indicating that the pattern of performance reflected in the cognitive and affective theory of mind scores was significantly different between the two groups.
One way ANOVA of the three medication subgroups indicated that the subgroups of patients did not differ in their cognitive (F=0.368, df=2, 16, n.s.) or affective theory of mind (F=0.993, df=2, 16, n.s.) abilities.
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The Relationship between Cognitive and Affective Empathy and Theory of Mind
To assess the associations between measures of cognitive empathy, affective empathy, and theory of mind (affective and cognitive), we evaluated the correlations between the cognitive (perspective-taking) and the affective (personal distress) scales of the Interpersonal Reactive Index and the affective and cognitive faux pas in the entire sample and in each group separately. Correlational analysis between variables on the entire sample indicated that the cognitive empathy scale correlated significantly with the cognitive theory of mind scale (r=0.366, p=0.024) as well as the affective theory of mind scale (r=0.357, p=0.028). On the other hand the affective empathy scale did not correlate with the cognitive theory of mind (r=−0.017, n.s.) nor with the affective theory of mind scale (r=0.083 n.s.).
In the bipolar disorder patients, cognitive empathy scale correlated significantly with the affective theory of mind scale (r=0.475, p=0.046) but not with the cognitive theory of mind scale (r=0.285, n.s.). The affective empathy scale did not correlate with the cognitive theory of mind (r=−0.341, n.s.) nor with the affective theory of mind scale (r=0.291 n.s.).
In the healthy comparison group, cognitive empathy scale did not correlate significantly with the cognitive theory of mind scale (r=0.191, n.s.) nor with the affective theory of mind scale (r=0.037, n.s.). The affective empathy scale did not correlate with the cognitive theory of mind scale (r=−0.162, n.s.) nor with the affective theory of mind scale (r=−0.053 n.s.).
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Recognition of Basic Emotions and Mentalizing Emotions (Reading the Mind in The Eyes)
Independent samples t tests revealed no significant differences between groups in the measure of basic emotions (t=0.111, df=35, n.s.) or mentalizing/social emotions (t=1.428, df=35, n.s.), indicating that bipolar disorder patients are not impaired in recognizing basic and complex emotions.
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Neurocognitive Assessment of Prefrontal Cortical Functioning
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Cognitive Flexibility: Intradimensional/Extradimensional Task
The primary variables of interest were the number of trials taken to reach criterion at stages 6 (intradimensional shift), 7 (reversal of the intradimensional shift), 8 (extradimensional shift), and 9 (reversal of the extradimensional shift) of the task. In order to obtain a measure of the trends over the different stages, a repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) was conducted, with stage as the within subjects factor and group as the between-subjects factor. As evident in Figure 3
, analysis was carried out for the trials to criterion variable for stages 6—9. This analysis revealed a significant group effect (F=5.951, df=1, 37, p=0.020), a significant stage effect (F=13.349, df=3, 35, p=0.0001) and a significant (marginal) group by stage effect (F=2.761, df=3, 35, p=0.057).
Follow-up t tests showed that that the two groups did not differ significantly in the number of trials made on stages 6 (t=−0.808, df=37, n.s.) and 5 (t=1.610, df=37, n.s.). However, the bipolar disorder group made significantly more trials until reaching criterion in stages 8 (t=2.558, df=37, p=0.018) and marginally in stage 9 (t=1.764, df=37, p=0.08).
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Planning: Stocking of Cambridge Task
An independent sample t test revealed the bipolar disorder group did not need more time (Mean Initial Thinking Time) to solve each of the four (t=−0.748, df=36, n.s.), and five-move problem (t=1.617, df=36, n.s.), than the comparison group, as measured by the "Mean Moves" variables.
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The Relationship between Empathy and Executive Functions in Bipolar Disorder
A correlation analysis was done in order to explore the relation between scores on the empathy scales and performance on the intradimensional/extradimensional and Stocking of Cambridge tasks. In the patient group, this analysis revealed significant negative correlations only between cognitive empathy and intradimensional/extradimensional reversal scores (tapping on orbitofrontal performance) in stage 7 (r=−0.432, p=0.037) but not with the shifting scores (tapping dorsolateral performance) or in stage 9. The lower participants’ cognitive empathy scores were, the more trials they needed to reach the reversal criterion. Empathy scores did not significantly correlate with the Stocking of Cambridge task.
A significant group by type (interaction) effect (F=7.164, df=1, 37, p=0.011) indicated that the pattern of performance in the cognitive and affective empathy scores was significantly different between the two groups. Follow-up independent T-test indicated that bipolar disorder patients had significantly lower scores in the cognitive empathy subscale (perspective-taking) (t=2.102, df=37, p=0.042). However, patients scored significantly higher than comparison subjects on the affective empathy subscale (personal distress) (t=−2.059, df=37, p=0.047).
A significant group effect (F=6.649, df=1, 36, p=0.014), a significant type effect (F=17.805, df=1, 36, p=0.0001), and a significant group by type (interaction) effect (F=11.910, df=1, 36, p=0.001) were found. Follow-up independent T-tests indicated that significant differences were evident in the cognitive faux pas variable (t=−3.502, df=36, p=0.001), but not in the affective faux pas scores (t=1.531, df=36, n.s.).
The primary variables of interest were the number of trials taken to reach criterion at stages 6 (intradimensional shift), 7 (reversal of the intradimensional shift), 8 (extradimensional shift), and 9 (reversal of the extradimensional shift) of the task. Rrepeated measures ANOVA revealed a significant group effect (F=5.951, df=1, 37, p=0.020), a significant stage effect (F=13.349, df=3, 35, p=0.0001) and a significant (marginal) group by stage effect (F=2.761, df=3, 35, p=0.057).
Follow-up t-tests showed that that the two groups did not differ significantly in the number of trials made on stage 6, but did differ in stages 8 (t=2.558, df=37, p=0.018) and marginally in stage 9 (t=1.764, df=37, p=0.08)