| Literature DB >> 22253861 |
Irina Falkenberg1, Nils Kohn, Regina Schoepker, Ute Habel.
Abstract
Anhedonia, reduced positive affect and enhanced negative affect are integral characteristics of major depressive disorder (MDD). Emotion dysregulation, e.g. in terms of different emotion processing deficits, has consistently been reported. The aim of the present study was to investigate mood changes in depressive patients using a multidimensional approach for the measurement of emotional reactivity to mood induction procedures. Experimentally, mood states can be altered using various mood induction procedures. The present study aimed at validating two different positive mood induction procedures in patients with MDD and investigating which procedure is more effective and applicable in detecting dysfunctions in MDD. The first procedure relied on the presentation of happy vs. neutral faces, while the second used funny vs. neutral cartoons. Emotional reactivity was assessed in 16 depressed and 16 healthy subjects using self-report measures, measurements of electrodermal activity and standardized analyses of facial responses. Positive mood induction was successful in both procedures according to subjective ratings in patients and controls. In the cartoon condition, however, a discrepancy between reduced facial activity and concurrently enhanced autonomous reactivity was found in patients. Relying on a multidimensional assessment technique, a more comprehensive estimate of dysfunctions in emotional reactivity in MDD was available than by self-report measures alone and this was unsheathed especially by the mood induction procedure relying on cartoons. The divergent facial and autonomic responses in the presence of unaffected subjective reactivity suggest an underlying deficit in the patients' ability to express the felt arousal to funny cartoons. Our results encourage the application of both procedures in functional imaging studies for investigating the neural substrates of emotion dysregulation in MDD patients. Mood induction via cartoons appears to be superior to mood induction via faces and autobiographical material in uncovering specific emotional dysfunctions in MDD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22253861 PMCID: PMC3253810 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographic and neuropsychological characteristics for patients and controls.
| Patients | Patients (male) | Patients (female) | Controls | Controls (male) | Controls (female) | t-value Patients vs. Controls | SSRI/SNRI (n = 6) | Other medication (n = 10) | SSRI/SNRI Vs. other | |
|
| 14.8 (4.2) | 14.1 (3.7) | 15.6 (4.8) | - | - | -. | - | 14.8 (3.5) | 14.9 (4.8) | t16 = −.29; p = .98 |
|
| 21.4 (9.4) | 21.7(10.3) | 21.1 (9.1) | 3.2 (3.1) | 2.1 (2.3) | 4.4 (3.2) |
| 20.6 (9.3) | 21.9 (9.9) | t16 = .26; p = .798 |
|
| 37.4 (15.2) | 40.5(13.8) | 34.5(13.9) | 35 (14.2) | 34.75 (14.2) | 35.2 (15.2) | t30 = .468; p = .64 | 35.17 (17.5) | 38.8 (14.5) | t16 = −.45: p = .66 |
|
| 11.6 (2.2) | 11.5 (2.7) | 11.7 (1.6) | 11.8 (2.5) | 12.1 (3.2) | 11.6 (1.8) | t30 = −.357; p = .72 | 11 (1.8) | 12 (2.4) | t16 = −.22; p = .83 |
|
| 105.8 (14.3) | 108.8 (17.8) | 103.1(10.9) | 104.6 (15.3) | 102.8 (16.7) | 106.5 (14.6) | t30 = .157; p = .87 | 105.8 (7.5) | 105.8 (17.9) | t16 = .85; p = .933 |
|
| 12.9 (3.8) | 12.9 (4.6) | 13.0 (3.5) | 14.3 (3.9) | 13.3 (3.3) | 15.4 (4.4) | t30 = −.987; p = .33 | 12.7 (4.5) | 13.1 (3.7) | t16 = −.21;p = .837 |
|
| 13.0 (4.0) | 14.0 (4.4) | 12.1 (3.8) | 14.1 (1.9) | 13.9 (2.1) | 14.4 (1.9) | t30 = −1.0; p = .32 | 13.7 (3.9) | 12.6 (4.3) | t16 = .51; p = .618 |
|
| 34.4 (14.6) | 34.6(14.6) | 34.3 (15.5) | 24.1 (8.3) | 21.1 (5.3) | 27.1 (9.9) |
| 31.2 (14.8) | 36.6 (14.9) | t16 = −.47; p = .65 |
|
| 61.1(34.2) | 57.3(23.3) | 64.5 (43.0) | 45.1 (18.1) | 43.4 (17.1) | 46.9 (20.2) | t30 = .1.48; p = .15 | 43.7 (9.2) | 72.8 (40.2) | t16 = 1.49; p = .16 |
|
| 14.1 (3.3) | 15.0 (3.6) | 13.3 (3.0) | 14.4 (2.2) | 15.5 (2.3) | 13.4 (1.7) | t30 = −.37; p = .71 | 15.0 (3.8) | 13.4 (3.1) | t16 = .89; p = .388 |
Subdivided by gender and for patients by medication. Significant differences are marked in bold.
Figure 1Examples of the stimulus material used in the experiment.
a) Description of mood induction paradigm with sample pictures from the FEBA faces data set [e.g. 10] b) Sample cartoons from the newly developed cartoon paradigm.
Mean ESR and PANAS values for patients and controls in the two mood induction conditions.
| Patients in NMI | Controls in NMI | Difference (t and p values) | Patients in HMI | Controls in HMI | Difference (t and p values) | Patients in C | Controls in C | Difference (t and p values) | |
| Anger | 1.06 (.25) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.0 p = .33 | 1.063 (.25) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.0 p = 0.325 | 1.13 (.5) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.0 p = .325 |
| Disgust | 1.0 (0) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = n.a. p = n.a. | 1.0 (0) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = n.a p = n.a | 1.0 (0) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = n.a p = n.a |
| Happiness | 2.0 (.89) | 2.06 (.997) | t30 = −0.18 p = .85 | 2.63 (1.02) | 2.75 (.93) | t30 = −.36 p = .72 | 2.38 (.8) | 2.6 (1.08) | t30 = −.73 p = .466 |
| Sadness | 1.19 (.4) | 1.06 (.25) | t30 = 1.0 p = .3 | 1.19 (.54) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.37 p = .178 | 1.5 (1.03) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.93 p = .062 |
| Surprise | 1.63 (.96) | 1.69 (.79) | t30 = −.20 p = .842 | 2.0 (1.03) | 1.688 (.87) | t30 = .95 p = .363 | 2.0 (.96) | 1.81 (.91) | t30 = .56 p = .576 |
| Fear | 1.25 (1.0) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.0 p = .33 | 1.31 (1.01) | 1.063 (.25) | t30 = .95 p = .346 | 1.25 (1.0) | 1.0 (0) | t30 = 1.0 p = .325 |
| Pos. PANAS | 2.38 (.57) | 2.27 (.78) | t30 = .49 p = .627 | 2.58 (.62) | 2.51 (.76) | t30 = .28 p = .782 | 2.63 (.53) | 2.2 (.75) | t30 = 1.856 p = .74 |
| Neg. PANAS | 1.25 (.29) | 1.02 (.05) |
| 1.15 (.22) | 1.03 (.05) |
| 1.21 (.28) | 1.02 (.44) |
|
Significant differences are marked in bold. HMI = happy mood induction; NMI = neutral mood induction; C = cartoons and neutral pictures.
Figure 2Display of mean values for the subjective, behavioural and physiological variables.
a) mean SCR by group and condition b) mean positive and negative PANAS values by group and condition c) mean intensity of happy facial expression by group and condition.
Results of the discriminant analysis.
| F-value | P value | Standardized discriminance coefficient | |
| Negative affect in PANAS rating in neutral mood induction | 9.636 | 0.004 | 0.742 |
| Mean intensity of facial expressions of happiness in cartoons | 7.256 | 0.003 | −0.626 |
| Standardized SCR during cartoons | 7.181 | 0.001 | 0.639 |