scholarly journals The Peripheral View Melts Facial Emotion into a Blur: Investigating the Role of Spatial Frequency in Younger and Older Adults’ Peripheral Emotion Detection

2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (10) ◽  
pp. 181
Author(s):  
Andrew Mienaltowski ◽  
Alyssa R Minton ◽  
Connor Rogers ◽  
J. Farley Norman
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Torre-Luque ◽  
Alba Viera-Campos ◽  
Amy C. Bilderbeck ◽  
Maria Teresa Carreras ◽  
Jose Vivancos ◽  
...  

Abstract This study aimed to investigate the role of social withdrawal in emotion recognition of patients with schizophrenia (SZ) or probable Alzheimer’s disease (AD). A sample of 156 participants was recruited: SZ patients (n = 53), AD patients (n = 46), and two age-matched control groups (SZc, n = 29; ADc, n = 28). All participants provided self-report measures of loneliness and social functioning, and completed a facial emotion detection task. As a result, neuropsychiatric patients (both groups) showed poorer performance in detecting both positive and negative emotions compared with their healthy counterparts (p < .01). Social withdrawal was associated with higher accuracy in negative emotion detection, across all groups. Additionally, neuropsychiatric patients with higher social withdrawal showed lower positive emotion misclassification. Our findings help detail the similarities and differences in social function and facial emotion recognition in two disorders rarely studied in parallel, AD and SZ. Transdiagnostic patterns in these results suggest that social withdrawal is associated with heightened sensitivity to negative emotion expressions, potentially reflecting hypervigilance to social threat. Across the neuropsychiatric groups specifically, this hypervigilance associated with social withdrawal extended to positive emotion expressions, an emotional-cognitive bias that may impact social functioning in people with severe mental illness.


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