Abstract

Difficulties in recognizing emotional signals might have serious implications for social interactions. Neurodegenerative diseases that affect neural networks involved in emotional displays processing might thus be connected with a disproportionate impairment in social life. This study aimed at examining the ability to decode basic emotions from dynamic visual displays in mild to moderate dementia. Thirty old adults diagnosed as demented, and 30 gender-matched healthy controls were administered a measure of emotion evaluation. The groups did not differ significantly in age and educational level. The emotion evaluation test was designed to examine a person’s ability to visually identify basic emotions and discriminate these from neutral expressions, when they were expressed as dynamic, subtle, day-to-day expressions. Results showed that demented participants had a great difficulty in recognizing the positively valenced emotions of happiness and pleasant surprise, while sadness, anger, and anxiety were the easiest emotions to recognize. Healthy controls were almost excellent on happiness recognition, while discrimination of non-emotional displays was the most difficult condition often mislabeled as anxiety or pleasant surprise. Results were mainly discussed in terms of socio-emotional selectivity theory positing that only older adults capable of exerting cognitive controlled favor emotional over non-emotional and positive over negative information.

Highlights

  • Emotional signals are considered as main aspects of social communication and social functioning in general; face especially provides perceivers with a wealth of socially relevant information about another person’s identity, age, sex, emotion and direction of attention

  • The findings showed that there was a tendency for better recognition of disgust in the demented group compared to healthy controls: Disgust, F (1, 58) = 5.66, p = 0.02

  • The results showed that patients with dementia were significantly impaired in happiness decoding from dynamic visual cues—systematically tending to confuse happiness with pleasant surprise—compared to cognitively healthy older adults

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Summary

Introduction

Emotional signals are considered as main aspects of social communication and social functioning in general; face especially provides perceivers with a wealth of socially relevant information about another person’s identity, age, sex, emotion and direction of attention. The recognition and detection of emotions from bodily expressions and different categories of postures are considered as important, as individuals use them to make inferences about the emotional states of others via extracting contextual information useful for an emotional interpretation. Being able to infer what others are feeling enables us to anticipate events, avoid conflicts and regulate our emotions. Deficits in emotion recognition can have a devastating impact on social skills, on several forms of verbal and non-verbal communication and the development and maintenance of key social relationships [3]-[6]

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