Abstract

The successful integration of eye gaze direction and emotion cues from faces is important not only for co-ordinated interactions, but also for the detection of social signals alerting us to threat posed by a conspecific, or elsewhere in our immediate environment. It is now well-established that people with schizophrenia experience aberrant eye gaze and facial emotion processing. These social-cognitive differences might contribute to the maintenance of socially-themed delusions which are characterised by the hyper-attribution of threatening intentions to others. However, no study has directly examined whether the mechanisms which govern the integration of eye gaze and emotion information diverge in schizophrenia, and more importantly, whether this reflects a fundamental ‘bottom-up’ perceptual deficit or a ‘top-down’ cognitive bias. Fifteen outpatients diagnosed with schizophrenia and 21 healthy age- and IQ-matched controls performed an emotion categorisation task (anger/fear) on morphed facial expressions of anger or fear, displaying either direct or averted gaze. Results in both controls and patients replicated the previous finding that combinations of anger with direct gaze, and fear with averted gaze – which signal a relevant threat to the observer – benefited from more accurate emotion recognition than alternate gaze-emotion combinations. Bayesian model selection revealed that for patients this effect was mediated by a shift in decision bias towards emotions which signal self-relevant threat, rather than a change in sensitivity as observed in controls. These results critically highlight a different cognitive mechanism governing gaze and face-cued emotion integration in schizophrenia, which has a top-down influence on the evaluation of perceptual input.

Highlights

  • Schizophrenia is a psychiatric condition that affects multiple cognitive processes – including social and affective cognition – which can negatively impact social functioning and quality of life (Kee et al, 2003; Penn et al, 1996)

  • It is well established that the processing of social information conveyed by facial expressions and eye gaze is divergent in schizophrenia

  • Emotion categorisation accuracy increased with the level of displayed emotions for both groups (F(6,204) = 91.74, p < 0.001, η2 = 0.175)

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Summary

Introduction

Schizophrenia is a psychiatric condition that affects multiple cognitive processes – including social and affective cognition – which can negatively impact social functioning and quality of life (Kee et al, 2003; Penn et al, 1996). It is well established that the processing of social information conveyed by facial expressions and eye gaze is divergent in schizophrenia (see Billeke and Aboitiz, 2013 for review). Recent work on the psychometric assessment of social cognition in schizophrenia highlights the need to make this distinction between cognitive deficits and biases clearer (Pinkham et al, 2016b; Roberts and Pinkham, 2013; Walss-Bass et al, 2013). Such a distinction is key to achieving more specific explanations of divergent social functioning in schizophrenia

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