Cargando…

Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia

Laughter is a fundamental communicative signal in our relations with other people and is used to convey a diverse repertoire of social and emotional information. It is therefore potentially a useful probe of impaired socio-emotional signal processing in neurodegenerative diseases. Here we investigat...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sivasathiaseelan, Harri, Marshall, Charles R., Benhamou, Elia, van Leeuwen, Janneke E.P., Bond, Rebecca L., Russell, Lucy L., Greaves, Caroline, Moore, Katrina M., Hardy, Chris J.D., Frost, Chris, Rohrer, Jonathan D., Scott, Sophie K., Warren, Jason D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Masson 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8438290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34273798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2021.05.020
_version_ 1783752339348258816
author Sivasathiaseelan, Harri
Marshall, Charles R.
Benhamou, Elia
van Leeuwen, Janneke E.P.
Bond, Rebecca L.
Russell, Lucy L.
Greaves, Caroline
Moore, Katrina M.
Hardy, Chris J.D.
Frost, Chris
Rohrer, Jonathan D.
Scott, Sophie K.
Warren, Jason D.
author_facet Sivasathiaseelan, Harri
Marshall, Charles R.
Benhamou, Elia
van Leeuwen, Janneke E.P.
Bond, Rebecca L.
Russell, Lucy L.
Greaves, Caroline
Moore, Katrina M.
Hardy, Chris J.D.
Frost, Chris
Rohrer, Jonathan D.
Scott, Sophie K.
Warren, Jason D.
author_sort Sivasathiaseelan, Harri
collection PubMed
description Laughter is a fundamental communicative signal in our relations with other people and is used to convey a diverse repertoire of social and emotional information. It is therefore potentially a useful probe of impaired socio-emotional signal processing in neurodegenerative diseases. Here we investigated the cognitive and affective processing of laughter in forty-seven patients representing all major syndromes of frontotemporal dementia, a disease spectrum characterised by severe socio-emotional dysfunction (twenty-two with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, twelve with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia, thirteen with nonfluent-agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia), in relation to fifteen patients with typical amnestic Alzheimer's disease and twenty healthy age-matched individuals. We assessed cognitive labelling (identification) and valence rating (affective evaluation) of samples of spontaneous (mirthful and hostile) and volitional (posed) laughter versus two auditory control conditions (a synthetic laughter-like stimulus and spoken numbers). Neuroanatomical associations of laughter processing were assessed using voxel-based morphometry of patients' brain MR images. While all dementia syndromes were associated with impaired identification of laughter subtypes relative to healthy controls, this was significantly more severe overall in frontotemporal dementia than in Alzheimer's disease and particularly in the behavioural and semantic variants, which also showed abnormal affective evaluation of laughter. Over the patient cohort, laughter identification accuracy was correlated with measures of daily-life socio-emotional functioning. Certain striking syndromic signatures emerged, including enhanced liking for hostile laughter in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, impaired processing of synthetic laughter in the nonfluent-agrammatic variant (consistent with a generic complex auditory perceptual deficit) and enhanced liking for numbers (‘numerophilia’) in the semantic variant. Across the patient cohort, overall laughter identification accuracy correlated with regional grey matter in a core network encompassing inferior frontal and cingulo-insular cortices; and more specific correlates of laughter identification accuracy were delineated in cortical regions mediating affective disambiguation (identification of hostile and posed laughter in orbitofrontal cortex) and authenticity (social intent) decoding (identification of mirthful and posed laughter in anteromedial prefrontal cortex) (all p < .05 after correction for multiple voxel-wise comparisons over the whole brain). These findings reveal a rich diversity of cognitive and affective laughter phenotypes in canonical dementia syndromes and suggest that laughter is an informative probe of neural mechanisms underpinning socio-emotional dysfunction in neurodegenerative disease.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8438290
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher Masson
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-84382902021-09-17 Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia Sivasathiaseelan, Harri Marshall, Charles R. Benhamou, Elia van Leeuwen, Janneke E.P. Bond, Rebecca L. Russell, Lucy L. Greaves, Caroline Moore, Katrina M. Hardy, Chris J.D. Frost, Chris Rohrer, Jonathan D. Scott, Sophie K. Warren, Jason D. Cortex Behavioural Neurology Laughter is a fundamental communicative signal in our relations with other people and is used to convey a diverse repertoire of social and emotional information. It is therefore potentially a useful probe of impaired socio-emotional signal processing in neurodegenerative diseases. Here we investigated the cognitive and affective processing of laughter in forty-seven patients representing all major syndromes of frontotemporal dementia, a disease spectrum characterised by severe socio-emotional dysfunction (twenty-two with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, twelve with semantic variant primary progressive aphasia, thirteen with nonfluent-agrammatic variant primary progressive aphasia), in relation to fifteen patients with typical amnestic Alzheimer's disease and twenty healthy age-matched individuals. We assessed cognitive labelling (identification) and valence rating (affective evaluation) of samples of spontaneous (mirthful and hostile) and volitional (posed) laughter versus two auditory control conditions (a synthetic laughter-like stimulus and spoken numbers). Neuroanatomical associations of laughter processing were assessed using voxel-based morphometry of patients' brain MR images. While all dementia syndromes were associated with impaired identification of laughter subtypes relative to healthy controls, this was significantly more severe overall in frontotemporal dementia than in Alzheimer's disease and particularly in the behavioural and semantic variants, which also showed abnormal affective evaluation of laughter. Over the patient cohort, laughter identification accuracy was correlated with measures of daily-life socio-emotional functioning. Certain striking syndromic signatures emerged, including enhanced liking for hostile laughter in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, impaired processing of synthetic laughter in the nonfluent-agrammatic variant (consistent with a generic complex auditory perceptual deficit) and enhanced liking for numbers (‘numerophilia’) in the semantic variant. Across the patient cohort, overall laughter identification accuracy correlated with regional grey matter in a core network encompassing inferior frontal and cingulo-insular cortices; and more specific correlates of laughter identification accuracy were delineated in cortical regions mediating affective disambiguation (identification of hostile and posed laughter in orbitofrontal cortex) and authenticity (social intent) decoding (identification of mirthful and posed laughter in anteromedial prefrontal cortex) (all p < .05 after correction for multiple voxel-wise comparisons over the whole brain). These findings reveal a rich diversity of cognitive and affective laughter phenotypes in canonical dementia syndromes and suggest that laughter is an informative probe of neural mechanisms underpinning socio-emotional dysfunction in neurodegenerative disease. Masson 2021-09 /pmc/articles/PMC8438290/ /pubmed/34273798 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2021.05.020 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Behavioural Neurology
Sivasathiaseelan, Harri
Marshall, Charles R.
Benhamou, Elia
van Leeuwen, Janneke E.P.
Bond, Rebecca L.
Russell, Lucy L.
Greaves, Caroline
Moore, Katrina M.
Hardy, Chris J.D.
Frost, Chris
Rohrer, Jonathan D.
Scott, Sophie K.
Warren, Jason D.
Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title_full Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title_fullStr Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title_full_unstemmed Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title_short Laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
title_sort laughter as a paradigm of socio-emotional signal processing in dementia
topic Behavioural Neurology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8438290/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34273798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2021.05.020
work_keys_str_mv AT sivasathiaseelanharri laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT marshallcharlesr laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT benhamouelia laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT vanleeuwenjannekeep laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT bondrebeccal laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT russelllucyl laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT greavescaroline laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT moorekatrinam laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT hardychrisjd laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT frostchris laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT rohrerjonathand laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT scottsophiek laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia
AT warrenjasond laughterasaparadigmofsocioemotionalsignalprocessingindementia