| Literature DB >> 21550669 |
Rottraut Ille1, Anna Katharina Holl, Hans-Peter Kapfhammer, Karin Reisinger, Axel Schäfer, Anne Schienle.
Abstract
Findings on affective processing deficits in Huntington's disease (HD) have been inconsistent. It is still not clear whether HD patients are afflicted by specific deficits in emotion recognition and experience. We tested 28 symptomatic HD patients and presented them with pictures depicting facial expressions of emotions (Karolinska-Set) and with affective scenes (International Affective Picture System; IAPS). The faces were judged according to the displayed intensity of six basic emotions, whereas the scenes received intensity ratings for the elicited emotions in the viewer. Patients' responses were compared with those of 28 healthy controls. HD patients gave lower intensity ratings for facial expressions of anger, disgust and surprise than controls. Patients' recognition deficits were associated with reduced functional capacity, such as problems with social interactions. Moreover, their classification accuracy was reduced for angry, disgusted, sad and surprised faces. When judging affective scenes for the elicitation of happiness, disgust and fear, HD patients had a tendency to estimate them as more intense than controls. This finding points to a differential impairment in emotion recognition and emotion experience in HD. We found no significant correlations between emotion experience/recognition ratings and CAG repeats, symptom duration and UHDRS Motor Assessment in the patient group. 2011 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21550669 PMCID: PMC3155018 DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2011.04.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychiatry Res ISSN: 0165-1781 Impact factor: 3.222
Fig. 1Group comparison of the mean scores (standard errors) for intensity ratings of target emotions. Left panel refers to affective facial expressions and right panel to affective scenes.
Fig. 2Group comparison of the mean scores (standard errors) for classification accuracy (difference between rated target emotion intensity and mean sum of non-target intensity ratings) for affective facial expressions. Higher scores mean better classification performance.
Group comparison of the Mean scores (standard deviations) for intensity ratings in neutral stimuli for emotion perception tasks.
| HD | Controls | |
|---|---|---|
| Disgust | 2.38 (1.72) | 2.13 (1.26) |
| Anger | 3.24 (1.88) | 3.21 (1.60) |
| Fear | 2.85 (1.57) | 2.94 (1.78) |
| Sadness | 4.05 (1.94) | 4.17 (1.89) |
| Happiness | 3.78 (1.84) | 2.61 (1.42) |
| Surprise | 4.35 (2.17) | 2.81 (1.59) |
| Disgust | 1.60 (0.80) | 1.54 (0.94) |
| Anger | 1.80 (0.92) | 1.74 (1.01) |
| Fear | 1.65 (0.82) | 1.70 (0.96) |
| Sadness | 1.70 (1.00) | 1.64 (1.08) |
| Happiness | 4.74 (1.79) | 3.09 (1.66) |
| Surprise | 3.83 (2.15) | 2.95 (1.77) |