Abstract

Studies indicate that people with schizophrenia experience deficits in their ability to accurately detect emotions, both through facial expressions and voice intonation (i.e., prosody), and that functioning and symptoms are associated with these deficits. This study aimed to examine how facial emotion and affective prosody recognition are related to functioning and symptoms in a first-episode schizophrenia sample. Further, in light of research suggesting variable emotion-specific performance in people with schizophrenia, this study explored emotion-specific performance. Participants were 49 people with a recent first episode of schizophrenia taking part in a larger RCT. Results revealed that affective prosody recognition was significantly correlated with both role and social functioning. Regarding associations with psychiatric symptoms, facial emotion recognition was significantly, negatively associated with all three positive symptom scales, whereas affective prosody recognition was significantly, negatively associated with disorganization only. Emotion-specific analyses revealed that for affective prosody, participants were most accurate in recognizing anger and least accurate for disgust. For facial emotion recognition, participants were most accurate in recognizing happiness and least accurate for fear. Taken together, results suggest that affective prosody recognition is important for social and role functioning in people with first-episode schizophrenia. Results also suggest that this group may struggle more to identify negative emotions, though additional work is needed to clarify this pattern in affective prosody and determine real-world impact on social interactions.

Highlights

  • Research indicates that people with schizophrenia experience deficits in their abilities to accurately detect emotions compared to healthy controls

  • The Prosody Task was significantly associated with Global Functioning Scale (GFS) Role Functioning and Role Functioning Scale (RFS) Social Functioning

  • Our results indicate that affective prosody recognition is related to both role and social functioning, while facial emotion recognition only exhibited a trend-level association (p = .07) with social functioning

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Summary

Introduction

Research indicates that people with schizophrenia experience deficits in their abilities to accurately detect emotions compared to healthy controls. Emotion recognition deficits are present to the same degree of severity in prodromal, first episode, and chronic phases of schizophrenia (Green et al, 2011), and the emotional processing deficit after a first episode is relatively stable across five years (McCleery et al, 2016). Taken together, these observations suggest that emotion recognition deficits are core features of schizophrenia-spectrum illnesses that precede psychotic symptoms and likely contribute to their development

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