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When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?

BACKGROUND: Deficits in face emotion perception are among the most pervasive aspects of schizophrenia impairments which strongly affects interpersonal communication and social skills. MATERIAL/METHODS: Schizophrenic patients (PSZ) and healthy control subjects (HCS) performed 2 psychophysical tasks....

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Autores principales: Vaina, Lucia M., Rana, Kunjan D., Cotos, Ionela, Li-Yang, Chen, Huang, Melissa A., Podea, Delia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4282928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25537115
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.893118
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author Vaina, Lucia M.
Rana, Kunjan D.
Cotos, Ionela
Li-Yang, Chen
Huang, Melissa A.
Podea, Delia
author_facet Vaina, Lucia M.
Rana, Kunjan D.
Cotos, Ionela
Li-Yang, Chen
Huang, Melissa A.
Podea, Delia
author_sort Vaina, Lucia M.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Deficits in face emotion perception are among the most pervasive aspects of schizophrenia impairments which strongly affects interpersonal communication and social skills. MATERIAL/METHODS: Schizophrenic patients (PSZ) and healthy control subjects (HCS) performed 2 psychophysical tasks. One, the SAFFIMAP test, was designed to determine the impact of subliminally presented affective or neutral images on the accuracy of face-expression (angry or neutral) perception. In the second test, FEP, subjects saw pictures of face-expression and were asked to rate them as angry, happy, or neutral. The following clinical scales were used to determine the acute symptoms in PSZ: Positive and Negative Syndrome (PANSS), Young Mania Rating (YMRS), Hamilton Depression (HAM-D), and Hamilton Anxiety (HAM-A). RESULTS: On the SAFFIMAP test, different from the HCS group, the PSZ group tended to categorize the neutral expression of test faces as angry and their response to the test-face expression was not influenced by the affective content of the primes. In PSZ, the PANSS-positive score was significantly correlated with correct perception of angry faces for aggressive or pleasant primes. YMRS scores were strongly correlated with PSZ’s tendency to recognize angry face expressions when the prime was a pleasant or a neutral image. The HAM-D score was positively correlated with categorizing the test-faces as neutral, regardless of the affective content of the prime or of the test-face expression (angry or neutral). CONCLUSIONS: Despite its exploratory nature, this study provides the first evidence that conscious perception and categorization of facial emotions (neutral or angry) in PSZ is directly affected by their positive or negative symptoms of the disease as defined by their individual scores on the clinical diagnostic scales.
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spelling pubmed-42829282015-01-08 When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions? Vaina, Lucia M. Rana, Kunjan D. Cotos, Ionela Li-Yang, Chen Huang, Melissa A. Podea, Delia Med Sci Monit Clinical Research BACKGROUND: Deficits in face emotion perception are among the most pervasive aspects of schizophrenia impairments which strongly affects interpersonal communication and social skills. MATERIAL/METHODS: Schizophrenic patients (PSZ) and healthy control subjects (HCS) performed 2 psychophysical tasks. One, the SAFFIMAP test, was designed to determine the impact of subliminally presented affective or neutral images on the accuracy of face-expression (angry or neutral) perception. In the second test, FEP, subjects saw pictures of face-expression and were asked to rate them as angry, happy, or neutral. The following clinical scales were used to determine the acute symptoms in PSZ: Positive and Negative Syndrome (PANSS), Young Mania Rating (YMRS), Hamilton Depression (HAM-D), and Hamilton Anxiety (HAM-A). RESULTS: On the SAFFIMAP test, different from the HCS group, the PSZ group tended to categorize the neutral expression of test faces as angry and their response to the test-face expression was not influenced by the affective content of the primes. In PSZ, the PANSS-positive score was significantly correlated with correct perception of angry faces for aggressive or pleasant primes. YMRS scores were strongly correlated with PSZ’s tendency to recognize angry face expressions when the prime was a pleasant or a neutral image. The HAM-D score was positively correlated with categorizing the test-faces as neutral, regardless of the affective content of the prime or of the test-face expression (angry or neutral). CONCLUSIONS: Despite its exploratory nature, this study provides the first evidence that conscious perception and categorization of facial emotions (neutral or angry) in PSZ is directly affected by their positive or negative symptoms of the disease as defined by their individual scores on the clinical diagnostic scales. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2014-12-24 /pmc/articles/PMC4282928/ /pubmed/25537115 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.893118 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2014 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License
spellingShingle Clinical Research
Vaina, Lucia M.
Rana, Kunjan D.
Cotos, Ionela
Li-Yang, Chen
Huang, Melissa A.
Podea, Delia
When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title_full When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title_fullStr When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title_full_unstemmed When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title_short When does Subliminal Affective Image Priming Influence the Ability of Schizophrenic Patients to Perceive Face Emotions?
title_sort when does subliminal affective image priming influence the ability of schizophrenic patients to perceive face emotions?
topic Clinical Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4282928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25537115
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.893118
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