Abstract

Evidence from previous neurological studies has revealed that drugs can cause severe damage to the human brain structure, leading to significant cognitive disorders in emotion processing, such as psychotic-like symptoms (e.g., speech illusion: reporting positive/negative responses when hearing white noise) and negative reinforcement. Due to these emotion processing disorders, drug addicts may experience difficulties in emotion recognition and speech illusion, which are essential for interpersonal communication and a healthy life experience. However, previous research has yielded divergent results regarding whether drug addicts are more attracted to negative stimuli or positive stimuli. Additionally, little attention has been paid to the speech illusion experienced by drug addicts. Therefore, the current study aimed to investigate the effect of drugs on patterns of emotion recognition through two basic channels: auditory (speech) and visual (facial expression), as well as the speech illusions of drug addicts. The current study conducted a perceptual experiment in which 52 stimuli of four emotions (happy, angry, sad, and neutral) in three modalities (auditory, visual, auditory + visual [congruent & incongruent]) were presented to address Question 1 regarding the multi-modal emotional speech perception of drug addicts. Additionally, 26 stimuli of white noise and speech of three emotions in two noise conditions were presented to investigate Question 2 concerning the speech illusion of drug addicts. A total of thirty-five male drug addicts (25 heroin addicts and 10 ketamine addicts) and thirty-five male healthy controls were recruited for the perception experiment. The results, with heroin and ketamine addicts as examples, revealed that drug addicts exhibited lower accuracies in multi-modal emotional speech perception and relied more on visual cues for emotion recognition, especially when auditory and visual inputs were incongruent. Furthermore, both heroin and ketamine addicts showed a higher incidence of emotional responses when only exposed to white noise, suggesting the presence of psychotic-like symptoms (i.e., speech illusion) in drug addicts. Our results preliminarily indicate a disorder or deficit in multi-modal emotional speech processing among drug addicts, and the use of visual cues (e.g., facial expressions) may be recommended to improve their interpretation of emotional expressions. Moreover, the speech illusions experienced by drug addicts warrant greater attention and awareness. This paper not only fills the research gap in understanding multi-modal emotion processing and speech illusion in drug addicts but also contributes to a deeper understanding of the effects of drugs on human behavior and provides insights for the theoretical foundations of detoxification and speech rehabilitation for drug addicts.

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