| Literature DB >> 28488040 |
Robert Ward1, Shubha Sreenivas1, Judi Read2, Kate E A Saunders2, Robert D Rogers3.
Abstract
Serotonergic mechanisms mediate the expression of personality traits (such as impulsivity, aggression and anxiety) that are linked to vulnerability to psychological illnesses, and modulate the identification of emotional expressions in the face as well as learning about broader classes of appetitive and aversive signals. Faces with neutral expressions signal a variety of socially relevant information, such that inferences about the big five personality traits, including Neuroticism, Extraversion and Agreeableness, can be accurately made on the basis of emotionally neutral facial photographs. Given the close link between Neuroticism and psychological distress, we investigated the effects of diminished central serotonin activity (achieved by tryptophan depletion) upon the accuracy of 52 healthy (non-clinical) adults' discriminations of personality from facial characteristics. All participants were able to discriminate reliably four of the big five traits. However, the tryptophan-depleted participants were specifically less accurate in discriminating Neuroticism than the matched non-depleted participants. These data suggest that central serotonin activity modulates the identification of not only negative facial emotional expression but also a broader class of signals about personality characteristics linked to psychological distress.Entities:
Keywords: Neuroticism; Personality; Psychological distress; Serotonin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28488040 PMCID: PMC5486943 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-017-4619-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychopharmacology (Berl) ISSN: 0033-3158 Impact factor: 4.530
Fig. 1Face stimuli and example discrimination statements for a Agreeableness, b Extraversion and c Neuroticism. In each case, the face on the left is a composite of 15 women scoring highest on the trait measure, and the face on the right a composite of 15 women scoring lowest on that measure (see Kramer and Ward 2010 for details). Participants were asked to identify which of the two faces best matched the accompanying discrimination statement
Demographic and psychometric characteristics, plus plasma tryptophan measurements, of 25 healthy adults who completed a tryptophan depletion protocol and consumed an amino acid drink without tryptophan (T− participants) and 27 healthy adults who consumed an amino acid drink that did contain tryptophan (T+ participants)
| T− participants | T+ participants | |
|---|---|---|
| Sex (male/female) | 10:15 | 16:11 |
| Age | 25.2 (1.21) | 24.1 (1.20) |
| Depressive symptoms (BDI) | 0.68 (0.34) | 1.30 (0.30) |
| Trait +ve affect (PANAS) | 37.5 (1.38) | 35.9 (1.15) |
| Trait −ve affect (PANAS) | 11.4 (0.39) | 12.9 (0.83) |
| Total Aggression (Buss-Perry) | 44.4 (2.16) | 50.3 (2.18) |
| Raven’s Matrices | 53.4 (0.69) | 54.4 (0.76) |
| Plasma trypt. (μg/ml) 0 h | 10.2 (0.39) | 10.4 (0.38) |
| Plasma trypt. (μg/ml) +5 h | 4.0 (0.68) | 21.2 (1.11) |
| Tryptophan LNAA ratio 0 h | 0.14 (0.01) | 0.14 (0.01) |
| Tryptophan LNAA ratio + 5 h | 0.03 (0.01) | 0.16 (0.01) |
| State +ve affect (PANAS) +0 h | 28.2 (1.66) | 29.0 (1.41) |
| State +ve affect (PANAS) +5 h | 27.2 (1.58) | 29.0 (1.59) |
| State −ve affect (PANAS) +0 h | 12.2 (0.57) | 12.6 (0.45) |
| State −ve affect (PANAS) +5 h | 11.5 (0.58) | 11.1 (0.27) |
Beck’s Depression Inventory (BDI-II; Beck et al. 1996), trait and state Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS; Watson et al. 1988), Raven’s Matrices (Raven et al. 2004) and Aggression Questionnaire (Buss and Perry 1992)
Fig. 2Mean proportionate accuracy on the two-alternative forced-choice trait discrimination of Agreeableness, Extraversion, and Neuroticism in 27 healthy participants who had consumed an amino acid drink that did contain tryptophan (T+ participants) and 25 healthy adult participants who had consumed an amino acid drink without tryptophan (T− participants). Error bars represent 1 standard error
Mean discrimination accuracy (together with standard errors) for Agreeableness, Extraversion, Neuroticism, Openness and Conscientiousness in 25 healthy adults who had completed a tryptophan depletion protocol and consumed an amino acid drink without tryptophan (T− participants) and 27 matched healthy adults who had consumed an amino acid drink that did contain tryptophan (T+ participants)
| T− participants | T+ participants | |
|---|---|---|
| Agreeableness | 0.63 (0.056) | 0.63 (0.063) |
| Extraversion | 0.75 (0.056) | 0.75 (0.052) |
| Neuroticism | 0.62 (0.054) | 0.77 (0.040) |
| Conscientiousness | 0.57 (0.059) | 0.63 (0.045) |
| Openness | 0.47 (0.056) | 0.54 (0.048) |
Mixed-effects binomial modelling of discrimination on Neuroticism trials
| (Intercept) | 1.00 (.375) |
| Sex (male = 0; female = 1) | −.796 (.360)* |
| Age | .131 (.190) |
| Buss-Perry total | −.327 (.210) |
| BDI | .061 (.193) |
| Trait PANAS +ve | −.047 (.166) |
| Trait PANAS −ve | −.267 (.189) |
| Ravens | .004 (.178) |
| Treatment (T+ = 0; T− = 1) | −.934 (.358)** |
Standardized weighting (standard error) for non-categorical factors