INTRODUCTION: Our study investigated the ability of nondemented Parkinson's disease (PD) patients to explicitly identify emotional words and to show implicit sensitivity to these emotions in a task that did not require emotional processing. METHODS: Twelve PD patients and 12 healthy controls, matched for age and education, performed lexical decision (LD) and emotional categorisation tasks (fear, disgust, and happiness) on the same words. RESULTS: PD patients were specifically impaired in the explicit identification of disgust with a decreased accuracy in LD. However, a slowdown in LD latency in both PD patients and the control group suggested the persistence of emotional sensitivity to disgust. CONCLUSION: Despite the persistence of an automatic capture by the emotional content of disgust, PD patients may suffer from emotional deficits in recognising both the emotional and semantic components of words, resulting in blunted emotional responses.
INTRODUCTION: Our study investigated the ability of nondemented Parkinson's disease (PD) patients to explicitly identify emotional words and to show implicit sensitivity to these emotions in a task that did not require emotional processing. METHODS: Twelve PDpatients and 12 healthy controls, matched for age and education, performed lexical decision (LD) and emotional categorisation tasks (fear, disgust, and happiness) on the same words. RESULTS:PDpatients were specifically impaired in the explicit identification of disgust with a decreased accuracy in LD. However, a slowdown in LD latency in both PDpatients and the control group suggested the persistence of emotional sensitivity to disgust. CONCLUSION: Despite the persistence of an automatic capture by the emotional content of disgust, PDpatients may suffer from emotional deficits in recognising both the emotional and semantic components of words, resulting in blunted emotional responses.
Authors: Audrey A Hazamy; Sara A Horne; Michael S Okun; Chris J Hass; Lori J P Altmann Journal: J Speech Lang Hear Res Date: 2019-06-06 Impact factor: 2.297
Authors: Rottraut Ille; Albert Wabnegger; Petra Schwingenschuh; Petra Katschnig-Winter; Mariella Kögl-Wallner; Karoline Wenzel; Anne Schienle Journal: J Int Neuropsychol Soc Date: 2015-04-24 Impact factor: 2.892