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Laura A. Faith

Researcher at University of Missouri–Kansas City

Publications -  12
Citations -  89

Laura A. Faith is an academic researcher from University of Missouri–Kansas City. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metacognition & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications receiving 38 citations. Previous affiliations of Laura A. Faith include Veterans Health Administration.

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Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy: A Recovery-Oriented Treatment Approach for Psychosis.

TL;DR: The Metacognitive Insight and Reflection Therapy (MERIT) as mentioned in this paper is a treatment approach that is explicitly concerned with self-experience in psychosis, which uses the term metacognition to describe those cognitive processes that underpin selfexperience and posits that addressing metacognitive deficits will aid persons diagnosed with psychosis in making sense of the challenges they face and deciding how to effectively manage them.
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Contrasting metacognitive profiles and their association with negative symptoms in groups with schizophrenia, early psychosis and depression in a Russian sample.

TL;DR: In this paper, negative symptoms in psychotic disorders may be in part fueled by deficits in metacognition or the ability to form integrated ideas about oneself and others, and the possibility that metacognitive deficits are a psychological factor which cross culturally contributes to negative symptoms.
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Metacognition Is Uniquely Related to Concurrent and Prospective Assessments of Negative Symptoms Independent of Verbal Memory in Serious Mental Illness.

TL;DR: The idea that metacognition deficits are related to negative symptoms and point to the potential of metacognitive interventions to positively influence negative symptoms are supported.
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Addressing negative symptoms in schizophrenia through Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy: An illustrated Case Study

TL;DR: This article explored the application of one such treatment, designed to address deficits in metacognition, Metacognitive Reflection and Insight Therapy (MERIT), to addressing persistent negative symptoms.
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Psychosis and the challenges to narrative identity and the good life: Advances from research on the integrated model of metacognition

TL;DR: This paper explored how metacognitive deficits may restrict awareness of one's and others' purposes, one's sense of place in the world, and one's meaning of actions, and how these restrictions compromise the evolution of narratives in response to experience.