OBJECTIVES: Deficits in social cognition predict poor functional outcome in severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and autism. However, research findings on social cognition in bipolar disorder (BD) are sparse and inconsistent. This study aimed to characterize a critical social cognitive process-eye gaze perception-and examine its functional correlates in BD to inform psychopathological mechanisms. METHODS: Thirty participants with BD, 37 healthy controls (HC), and 46 psychiatric controls with schizophrenia (SZ) completed an eye-contact perception task. They viewed faces with varying gaze directions, head orientations, and emotion, and made eye-contact judgments. Psychophysics methods were used to estimate perception thresholds and the slope of the perception curve, which were then compared between the groups and correlated with clinical and functional measures using Bayesian inference. RESULTS: Compared with HC, patients with BD over-perceived eye contact when gaze direction was ambiguous, and this self-referential bias was similar to that in SZ. Patients with BD had lower thresholds (i.e., needed weaker eye-contact signal to start perceiving gaze as self-directed) but a similar slope compared with HC. Regression analyses showed that steeper slope predicted better socio-emotional functioning in HC and SZ, but not in BD. CONCLUSIONS: The psychopathology of social dysfunction was fundamentally different between BD and SZ in this modest sample. Eye gaze perception in BD was characterized by a self-referential bias but preserved perceptual sensitivity, the latter of which distinguished BD from SZ. The relationship between gaze perception and broader socio-emotional functioning in SZ and HC was absent in BD.
OBJECTIVES:Deficits in social cognition predict poor functional outcome in severe mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and autism. However, research findings on social cognition in bipolar disorder (BD) are sparse and inconsistent. This study aimed to characterize a critical social cognitive process-eye gaze perception-and examine its functional correlates in BD to inform psychopathological mechanisms. METHODS: Thirty participants with BD, 37 healthy controls (HC), and 46 psychiatric controls with schizophrenia (SZ) completed an eye-contact perception task. They viewed faces with varying gaze directions, head orientations, and emotion, and made eye-contact judgments. Psychophysics methods were used to estimate perception thresholds and the slope of the perception curve, which were then compared between the groups and correlated with clinical and functional measures using Bayesian inference. RESULTS: Compared with HC, patients with BD over-perceived eye contact when gaze direction was ambiguous, and this self-referential bias was similar to that in SZ. Patients with BD had lower thresholds (i.e., needed weaker eye-contact signal to start perceiving gaze as self-directed) but a similar slope compared with HC. Regression analyses showed that steeper slope predicted better socio-emotional functioning in HC and SZ, but not in BD. CONCLUSIONS: The psychopathology of social dysfunction was fundamentally different between BD and SZ in this modest sample. Eye gaze perception in BD was characterized by a self-referential bias but preserved perceptual sensitivity, the latter of which distinguished BD from SZ. The relationship between gaze perception and broader socio-emotional functioning in SZ and HC was absent in BD.
Authors: Adolfo Benito; Guillermo Lahera; Sara Herrera; Ramón Muncharaz; Guillermo Benito; Alberto Fernández-Liria; José Manuel Montes Journal: Braz J Psychiatry Date: 2013-12-23 Impact factor: 2.697
Authors: Nicholas S Thaler; Daniel N Allen; Griffin P Sutton; Mary Vertinski; Erik N Ringdahl Journal: J Psychiatr Res Date: 2013-09-30 Impact factor: 4.791
Authors: Andrea Fagiolini; David J Kupfer; Azadeh Masalehdan; John A Scott; Patricia R Houck; Ellen Frank Journal: Bipolar Disord Date: 2005-06 Impact factor: 6.744
Authors: Junghee Lee; Lori Altshuler; David C Glahn; David J Miklowitz; Kevin Ochsner; Michael F Green Journal: Am J Psychiatry Date: 2013-03 Impact factor: 18.112
Authors: Rafael Tabarés-Seisdedos; Vicente Balanzá-Martínez; José Sánchez-Moreno; Anabel Martinez-Aran; José Salazar-Fraile; Gabriel Selva-Vera; Cristina Rubio; Ignacio Mata; Manuel Gómez-Beneyto; Eduard Vieta Journal: J Affect Disord Date: 2008-03-04 Impact factor: 4.839
Authors: Tyler B Grove; Beier Yao; Savanna A Mueller; Merranda McLaughlin; Vicki L Ellingrod; Melvin G McInnis; Stephan F Taylor; Patricia J Deldin; Ivy F Tso Journal: Psychiatry Res Date: 2018-05-07 Impact factor: 3.222
Authors: Ivy F Tso; Carly A Lasagna; Kate D Fitzgerald; Costanza Colombi; Chandra Sripada; Scott J Peltier; Timothy D Johnson; Katharine N Thakkar Journal: J Psychiatr Brain Sci Date: 2020-09-10
Authors: Ivy F Tso; Cynthia Z Burton; Carly A Lasagna; Saige Rutherford; Beier Yao; Scott J Peltier; Timothy D Johnson; Melvin G McInnis; Stephan F Taylor Journal: Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging Date: 2021-07-31 Impact factor: 2.493
Authors: Ivy F Tso; Mike Angstadt; Saige Rutherford; Scott Peltier; Vaibhav A Diwadkar; Stephan F Taylor Journal: Schizophr Res Date: 2020-11-20 Impact factor: 4.662
Authors: Jacqueline R Thompson; Hanna C Gustafsson; Madison DeCapo; Diana L Takahashi; Jennifer L Bagley; Tyler A Dean; Paul Kievit; Damien A Fair; Elinor L Sullivan Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Date: 2018-04-23 Impact factor: 5.555