Abstract

BackgroundAntisocial, Narcissistic and Schizotypal personality disorders share dissocial traits, but have different impairments when recognizing facial emotions. Whether the differences are due to the early perceptual or late cognitive cerebral processes remains unknown. MethodsWe invited 12 patients with Antisocial, 13 with Narcissistic, 12 with Schizotypal personality disorder, and 25 healthy volunteers, to undergo the cerebral event-related potentials to facial expressions of Neutral, Anger, Happiness, and Sadness, and the anxiety and depression measures. ResultsCompared with healthy volunteers, reaction time to Happiness was prolonged in people with Narcissistic personality disorder; P3b amplitude to Sadness was smaller in people with Antisocial personality disorder. P2 amplitudes to Neutral and Happiness were negatively correlated with depression in people with Narcissistic personality disorder, and P3a and P3b latencies to Happiness were delayed in people with Schizotypal personality disorder relative to healthy volunteers. ConclusionsWhen responding to facial emotions, the attention or cerebral process was shallow in Antisocial, emotionally-affected in Narcissistic, and time-expanded in Schizotypal patients.

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