Literature DB >> 26002754

Relations between social-perceptual ability in multi- and unisensory contexts, autonomic reactivity, and social functioning in individuals with Williams syndrome.

Anna Järvinen1, Rowena Ng2, Davide Crivelli3, Andrew J Arnold4, Nicholas Woo-VonHoogenstyn4, Ursula Bellugi4.   

Abstract

Compromised social-perceptual ability has been proposed to contribute to social dysfunction in neurodevelopmental disorders. While such impairments have been identified in Williams syndrome (WS), little is known about emotion processing in auditory and multisensory contexts. Employing a multidimensional approach, individuals with WS and typical development (TD) were tested for emotion identification across fearful, happy, and angry multisensory and unisensory face and voice stimuli. Autonomic responses were monitored in response to unimodal emotion. The WS group was administered an inventory of social functioning. Behaviorally, individuals with WS relative to TD demonstrated impaired processing of unimodal vocalizations and emotionally incongruent audiovisual compounds, reflecting a generalized deficit in social-auditory processing in WS. The TD group outperformed their counterparts with WS in identifying negative (fearful and angry) emotion, with similar between-group performance with happy stimuli. Mirroring this pattern, electrodermal activity (EDA) responses to the emotional content of the stimuli indicated that whereas those with WS showed the highest arousal to happy, and lowest arousal to fearful stimuli, the TD participants demonstrated the contrasting pattern. In WS, more normal social functioning was related to higher autonomic arousal to facial expressions. Implications for underlying neural architecture and emotional functions are discussed.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autonomic nervous system; Electrodermal activity; Emotion; Facial expression; Multisensory integration; Social functioning; Vocalization; Williams syndrome

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26002754      PMCID: PMC4468004          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2015.04.035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  83 in total

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