Abstract

BackgroundAlexithymia is a personality trait that is characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing feelings. Previous studies have shown that alexithymia is related to problems in recognizing others’ emotional facial expressions when these are presented with temporal constraints. These problems can be less severe when the expressions are visible for a relatively long time. Because the neural correlates of these recognition deficits are still relatively unexplored, we investigated the labeling of facial emotions and brain responses to facial emotions as a function of alexithymia.ResultsForty-eight healthy participants had to label the emotional expression (angry, fearful, happy, or neutral) of faces presented for 1 or 3 seconds in a forced-choice format while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging. The participants’ level of alexithymia was assessed using self-report and interview. In light of the previous findings, we focused our analysis on the alexithymia component of difficulties in describing feelings. Difficulties describing feelings, as assessed by the interview, were associated with increased reaction times for negative (i.e., angry and fearful) faces, but not with labeling accuracy. Moreover, individuals with higher alexithymia showed increased brain activation in the somatosensory cortex and supplementary motor area (SMA) in response to angry and fearful faces. These cortical areas are known to be involved in the simulation of the bodily (motor and somatosensory) components of facial emotions.ConclusionThe present data indicate that alexithymic individuals may use information related to bodily actions rather than affective states to understand the facial expressions of other persons.

Highlights

  • Alexithymia is a personality trait that is characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing feelings

  • the objective measure of alexithymia (TSIA)-Difficulties Describing Feelings (DDF) was not related to Beck depression inventory (BDI) or to State-trait-anxiety inventory (STAI) and Positive and Negative affect schedule (PANAS) negative, but there was a negative correlation between TSIA-DDF and PANAS positive

  • This study investigated the effects of self-report (TAS-20DDF) and observer-rated (TSIA-DDF) facets of alexithymia on the labeling and neural processing of facial emotions presented for a rather long time (1 or 3 seconds)

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Summary

Introduction

Alexithymia is a personality trait that is characterized by difficulties in identifying and describing feelings. Previous studies have shown that alexithymia is related to problems in recognizing others’ emotional facial expressions when these are presented with temporal constraints. These problems can be less severe when the expressions are visible for a relatively long time. A personality trait that is related to difficulties in the recognition of emotional facial expression is alexithymia (literally translated as “no words for emotion”). Alexithymic features can be assessed using the 20-item self-reported Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20, [10]) or the Toronto Structured Interview for Alexithymia (TSIA, [11]) Both measures of alexithymia include the subscales Difficulties Describing Feelings (DDF), Difficulties Identifying Feelings and Externally Oriented Thinking (the TSIA includes imaginal processing)

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