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. 2020 Jul 24;11:722. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00722

Table 1.

Characteristics of the included studies.

RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIALS
Study Aim of the study Design Inclusion Criteria Sample characteristics Intervention Outcome measures Summary of results Limitations
Bölte et al. (18) Preliminary evaluation of the development of a computer-based program (using social cognition remediation) to test and to treat facial affect in autistic people. RCT Participants to have a diagnosis of autism or Asperger’s*. n = 10 autistic people aged 16–40. Computer-based program to test using social cognition remediation. International Affective Picture System* and fMRI-scans. The results indicated a statistically significant improvement in facial affect in the intervention group post the computer-based program. Small sample size affected power and limited the generalizability of findings. Gender bias by only including male participants.
De Vries et al. (10) To investigate the effect of a working memory flexibility-training compared to an active control condition. RCT Prior diagnosis of ASC, IQ ≥80* and absence of a seizure disorder. n = 121 children. Diagnosed with ASC. ‘Braingame Brian’: executive function training. 25 Group sessions. Corsi-BTT, BRIEF, SSRT, N-Back task, Gender-emotion switch-task* The trend toward improvement in working memory and cognitive flexibility. Not feasible for autistic children. High attrition rate. Targeted isolated aspects of cognition with limited functional impact. Does not specify participants gender
Miyajima et al. (20) To explore the effects of CRT using the frontal/executive program for ASC compared to treatment as usual (normal supportive psychotherapy). RCT Outpatients younger than aged 60 & ≥9 years of formal education. n = 14 adult outpatients. Diagnosed with ASC. CRT using the frontal/executive program—44 individual sessions. (2 sessions a week). BACS-J, WCST, CPT, ScoRS-J, LASMI* Intervention group improved in working memory, executive functioning, verbal fluency and planning. Small sample size. No follow-up investigation to determine the persistence of the effect.
Eack et al. (19) To examine the efficacy of CET for improving core cognitive (neurocognitive & social-cognitive) and employment outcomes in autistic adults. RCT Diagnosis of ASC, IQ ≥80*, adults aged 16-45 and young people aged 16–17. n = 33 adult, 7 adolescent male outpatients. Diagnosed with ASC. CET—60 h over 18 months. Individual and group sessions. MCCB, WCST, MSCEIT, PERT, PEDT, PEAT, SCS* CET significantly increased neurocognitive function & social cognition in comparison to the control group. Small sample size affected power. Treatment conditions were not matched (hours of treatment).
NON-RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL
Study Aim of the study Design Inclusion criteria Sample characteristics Intervention Outcome measures Summary of results Limitations
Golan et al. (27) To teach autistic adults to recognize complex emotions using interactive multimedia. Using social cognition remediation (SCR) to improve the theory of mind. Non-randomized controlled Diagnosis of ASC and not taking part in any other intervention. n = 39 autistic adults (32 males and 7 females). 13 people in each condition. SCR using the mind reading intervention. Individual and group sessions. CAM, RME, RMV & RMF* Significant improvements on measures of face and voice recognition following intervention. Sample was not randomized. The use of computer-based tasks is different to real life.
Turner-Brown et al. (28) To evaluate the efficacy of social cognition remediation to improve social-cognitive functioning in high functioning autistic adults. Non-randomized controlled Aged 18–55, ASC diagnosis, IQ ≥80. n = 11 high functioning autistic adults Group based Social Cognition and Interaction Training modified for autism. FEIT, Hinting Task, SCSQ and SSPA* Intervention group showed significant improvement in theory of mind & social communication skills. Small sample size and the quasi-experimental nature of the design where the sample was not randomized.
CASE SERIES
Study Aim of the study Design Inclusion criteria Sample characteristics Intervention Outcome measures Summary of results Limitations
Eack et al. (29) To examine the feasibility and potential efficacy of CET in autistic adults. Feasibility study ASC diagnosis, cognitive and social disability, IQ ≥80. n = 14 young autistic adults (12 males 2 females). CET. 60 hours over 18 months. Individual and group sessions. CSQ-8, NIMH MATRICS, WCST, CSSCEI, PERT, SCP* Improvements in cognitive difficulties and social cognition. Small sample size, limiting generalizability of the results. Gender bias.
Hajri et al. (30) To investigate whether CRT improves cognitive function in autistic children. Cross-sectional ASC diagnosis, cognitive difficulties*, on stable dose/type of medication. n = 16 autistic children, aged 6-21 with regular school curriculum. Individual CRT 22 sessions (one session per week). CPM, VSFT, PFT, SF, DST, CARS* CRT showed significant positive effects on neurocognition. Small N. No follow-up investigation to determine the long-term persistence of the effect. Does not specify participants gender.
Tchanturia et al. (31) To examine the treatment response of group CRT in anorexia nervosa patients with high or low autistic traits. Cross-sectional Adults with a diagnosis of anorexia nervosa. n = 35 adult inpatients with AN diagnosis. Group CRT 6 once-weekly sessions. Motivational ruler, DFlex, patient feedback questionnaire* No improvements following CRT for patients with high autistic traits. 23% of participants were only assessed for ASC with self-report questionnaires.
Hajri et al. (32) To evaluate CRT’s effectiveness for autistic children on executive functions, clinical symptoms & education. Cross-sectional ASC diagnosis, cognitive difficulties*, on stable dose/type of medication. n = 16 autistic children and adolescents, aged 6–21 with regular school curriculum. Individual CRT adapted for young autistic people, once weekly. CPM, HSCT, ROCF, CARS Significant improvement in intellectual abilities, executive functions and clinical symptoms following CRT Small sample size. No control group. Does not specify participants gender.
Okuda et al. (33) To investigate the effectiveness and feasibility of CRT for ASC individuals. Single-group pilot study ASC diagnosis, aged 18–50, IQ ≥80. n =16 female outpatients (4 adolescents and 12 adults). Individual CRT, 10 sessions (weekly or biweekly). Brixton, TMT, ST, WCST, ROCF, CFS* Increase in patient’s central coherence following CRT, but not statistically significant. Small sample size which results in a lack of power to detect statistical differences.
Dandil et al. (34) To examine the difference in the effects of individual CRT for patients with AN and high autistic features (HAF). Cross-sectional Adult females with a diagnosis of AN and completed the AQ-10*. n = 99 adult female inpatients diagnosed AN. (59 with HAF). Individual CRT, 10 sessions (weekly or biweekly). ROCF, Brixton SAT, DFlex* HAF patients showed improvement in cognitive flexibility but not central coherence. Participants were only assessed using ASC screening tools and not the full ASC diagnostic measures.
SINGLE CASE STUDY
Study Aim of the study Design Inclusion criteria Sample characteristics Intervention Outcome measures Summary of results Limitations
Dandil et al. (35) To investigate the feasibility of individual CRT for a complex single case study of anorexia nervosa (AN) and ASC. Case study Diagnosis of ASC and anorexia nervosa. n = 1 inpatient autistic female aged 21 diagnosed with AN. Individual CRT 13 sessions (twice a week). DFlex, ROCF, Motivational ruler, Brixton SAT * CRT indicated improvements in cognitive flexibility and central coherence. Single case study, therefore, hard to generalise to a larger population.

*Diagnosis of ASC = (1, 36, 37), IQ, Intelligence Quotient (38); Cognitive difficulties, The Cognitive Styles and Social Cognition Eligibility Interview (39); AQ-10, The 10-Item Autism Spectrum Quotient (40); Corsi-BTT, The Corsi block tapping task (41); BRIEF, Behavioral Rating Inventory of Executive Functioning (42); SSRT, The stop-signal reaction time (43); N-back task (44, 45), Gender-emotion switch-task (46). BACS-J, The Brief Assessment of Cognition in Schizophrenia- Japanese version (47); CPT, Continuous Performance Test (48); SCoRS-J, Schizophrenia Cognition Rating Scale-Japanese version (48); LASMI, Life Assessment Scale for the Mentally Ill (49); MCCB, MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery (50); MSCEIT, The Mayer–Salovey–Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (51); CAM, Cambridge Mindreading Face-Voice Battery (52); RME, Reading the Mind in the Eyes (53); RMV, Reading the Mind in the Voice task (54); RMF, Reading the mind in the films (55); FEIT, The Face Emotion Identification Test (56); The Hinting Task (57); SCSQ, Social Communication Skills Questionnaire (58); SSPA, Social Skills Performance Assessment (59); CSQ-8, Client Satisfaction Questionnaire-8 (60); NIMH MATRICS, Consensus Cognitive Battery (50); WCST, Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (61); CSSCEI, Cognitive Style and Social Cognition Eligibility Interview (39); PERT, Penn Emotion Recognition Test-40 (62); PEDT, Penn Emotion Discrimination Task (63); PEAT, Penn Emotional Acuity Test (64); SCS, the Social Cognition Profile (39); CPM, Raven Progressive Matrices (CPM); (65); VSFT, Verbal and Semantic Fluency Tests (66); PFT, phonemic fluency task (67); SF, Semantic Fluency (68); DST, Digit-span task (69); CARS, Childhood autism rating scale (70, 71); HSCT, Hayling Sentence Completion Task (72); TMT, Trail making test (73); ST, Stroop Test (74); CFS, Cognitive Flexibility Scale (75); DFlex, The Detail and Flexibility Questionnaire (76); ROCF, The Rey–Osterrieth Complex Figure (77); Brixton SAT, The Brixton Spatial Anticipation Test (72).