scholarly journals Review of Emotion Recognition in Mild Cognitive Impairment

2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 257-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna McCade ◽  
Greg Savage ◽  
Sharon L. Naismith
2013 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 165-173 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donna McCade ◽  
Greg Savage ◽  
Adam Guastella ◽  
Ian B. Hickie ◽  
Simon J. G. Lewis ◽  
...  

2008 ◽  
Vol 16 (5) ◽  
pp. 389-398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilaria Spoletini ◽  
Camillo Marra ◽  
Fulvia Di Iulio ◽  
Walter Gianni ◽  
Giuseppe Sancesario ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Helena S. Moreira ◽  
Ana Sofia Costa ◽  
Álvaro Machado ◽  
São Luís Castro ◽  
Selene G. Vicente ◽  
...  

Abstract Objective: The ability to recognize others’ emotions is a central aspect of socioemotional functioning. Emotion recognition impairments are well documented in Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias, but it is less understood whether they are also present in mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Results on facial emotion recognition are mixed, and crucially, it remains unclear whether the potential impairments are specific to faces or extend across sensory modalities, Method: In the current study, 32 MCI patients and 33 cognitively intact controls completed a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment and two forced-choice emotion recognition tasks, including visual and auditory stimuli. The emotion recognition tasks required participants to categorize emotions in facial expressions and in nonverbal vocalizations (e.g., laughter, crying) expressing neutrality, anger, disgust, fear, happiness, pleasure, surprise, or sadness. Results: MCI patients performed worse than controls for both facial expressions and vocalizations. The effect was large, similar across tasks and individual emotions, and it was not explained by sensory losses or affective symptomatology. Emotion recognition impairments were more pronounced among patients with lower global cognitive performance, but they did not correlate with the ability to perform activities of daily living. Conclusions: These findings indicate that MCI is associated with emotion recognition difficulties and that such difficulties extend beyond vision, plausibly reflecting a failure at supramodal levels of emotional processing. This highlights the importance of considering emotion recognition abilities as part of standard neuropsychological testing in MCI, and as a target of interventions aimed at improving social cognition in these patients.


2015 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 139-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maaike Waanders-Oude Elferink ◽  
Ilse van Tilborg ◽  
Roy P.C. Kessels

AbstractBackground: To provide a review of the literature on the perception of emotion in Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) and Mild cognitive impairment (MCI), and to evaluate if emotion intensity matters. Methodology: A systematic literature search of PubMed database was carried out using combinations or truncated versions of the keywords “MCI”, ”Alzheimer”, “emotion recognition”, “facial emotion recognition”, “social cognition” or “emotion perception”. Twenty-eight articles were found to meet the inclusion criteria. Results: Overall, AD patients performed worse on emotion perception than MCI patients and healthy controls. Half of the studies found an emotion-specific deficit for MCI patients on the emotions anger, sadness and fear. However, studies taking emotion intensity into account are still scarce. Conclusions: An emotion-intensity based approach may be more sensitive to detect subtle impairments in facial emotion recognition. Future studies need to take emotion intensity into account and also consider confounding factors such as overall cognition and mood.


2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 477-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Pietschnig ◽  
R. Aigner-Wöber ◽  
N. Reischenböck ◽  
I. Kryspin-Exner ◽  
D. Moser ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTBackground:Deficits in facial emotion recognition (FER) have been shown to substantially impair several aspects in everyday life of affected individuals (e.g. social functioning). Presently, we aim at assessing differences in emotion recognition performance in three patient groups suffering from mild forms of cognitive impairment compared to healthy controls.Methods:Performance on a concise emotion recognition test battery (VERT-K) of 68 patients with subjective cognitive decline (SCD), 44 non-amnestic (non-aMCI), and 25 amnestic patients (aMCI) with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) was compared with an age-equivalent sample of 138 healthy controls all of which were recruited within the framework of the Vienna Conversion to Dementia Study. Additionally, patients and controls underwent individual assessment using a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery examining attention, executive functioning, language, and memory (NTBV), the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), and a measure of premorbid IQ (WST).Results:Type of diagnosis showed a significant effect on emotion recognition performance, indicating progressively deteriorating results as severity of diagnosis increased. Between-groups effect sizes were substantial, showing non-trivial effects in all comparisons (Cohen's ds from −0.30 to −0.83) except for SCD versus controls. Moreover, emotion recognition performance was higher in women and positively associated with premorbid IQ.Conclusions:Our findings indicate substantial effects of progressive neurological damage on emotion recognition in patients. Importantly, emotion recognition deficits were observable in non-amnestic patients as well, thus conceivably suggesting associations between decreased recognition performance and global cognitive decline. Premorbid IQ appears to act as protective factor yielding lesser deficits in patients showing higher IQs.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Dodich ◽  
Chiara Crespi ◽  
Gaia Santi ◽  
Alessandra Marcone ◽  
Sandro Iannaccone ◽  
...  

Objective: Late onset amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) with long disease course and slow progression has been recently recognized as a possible phenotypical expression of a limbic-predominant neurodegenerative disorder. Basic emotion recognition ability crucially depending on temporo-limbic integrity is supposed to be impaired in this group of MCI subjects presenting a selective vulnerability of medio-temporal and limbic regions. However, no study specifically investigated this issue. Methods: Hereby, we enrolled 30 aMCI with a biomarker-based diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease (i.e., aMCI-AD, n=16) or a biomarker evidence of selective medio-temporal and limbic degeneration (aMCI-mTLD, n=14). Ekman-60 Faces Test (Ek-60F) was administered to each subject, comparing then the performance with that of 20 healthy controls (HC). Results: AMCI-mTLD subjects showed significantly lower Ek-60F global scores compared to HC, whose performance was comparable to aMCI-AD. Fear, surprise and anger recognition deficits characterized the aMCI-mTLD performance. Fear recognition scores were significantly lower in aMCI-mTLD compared to aMCI-AD. Conclusions: Impaired social cognition, suggested by defective performance in emotion recognition tasks, may be a useful cognitive marker to detect limbic-predominant aMCI subjects among the heterogeneous aMCI population.


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