Facial affect and affective prosody recognition in first-episode schizophrenia

Individuals with schizophrenia experience problems in the perception of emotional material; however, the specificity, extent, and nature of the deficits are unclear. Facial affect and affective prosody recognition were examined in representative samples of individuals with first-episode psychosis, assessed as outpatients during the early recovery phase of illness, and non-patients. Perception tasks were selected to allow examination of emotion category results across face and voice modalities. Facial tasks were computerised modifications of the Feinberg et al. procedure (Feinberg, T.E., Rifkin, A., Schaffer, C., Walker, E., 1986. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 43, 276--279). Prosody tasks were developed using four professional actors, and item selections were based on responses of undergraduates. Participant groups did not differ in their understanding of the words used to describe emotions. Findings supported small but consistent deficits in recognition of fear and sadness across both communication channels for the combined schizophrenia (n=29) and other psychotic disorders (n=28) groups as compared to the affective psychoses (n=23) and non-patients (n=24). A diagnostic effect was evident that was independent of the contribution of intelligence. The detection of emotion recognition impairments in first-episode schizophrenia suggests a trait deficit. The pattern of results is consistent with amygdala dysfunction in schizophrenia and related psychoses.

[1]  R. Gur,et al.  Facial emotion discrimination: III. Behavioral findings in schizophrenia , 1992, Psychiatry Research.

[2]  J. Kane,et al.  Schizophrenia research: challenges and opportunities , 1995 .

[3]  P. Pattison,et al.  Emotion recognition via facial expression and affective prosody in schizophrenia: a methodological review. , 2002, Clinical psychology review.

[4]  C. Osgood Studies on the generality of affective meaning systems. , 1962 .

[5]  M. Hamilton A RATING SCALE FOR DEPRESSION , 1960, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[6]  N C Andreasen,et al.  Symptoms of Schizophrenia: Methods, Meanings, and Mechanisms , 1995 .

[7]  H. Jackson,et al.  Diagnosing Personality Disorders in Recent-Onset Schizophrenia , 1990, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[8]  D. Wechsler WAIS-R manual : Wechsler adult intelligence scale-revised , 1981 .

[9]  J. Davitz,et al.  The communication of emotional meaning , 1964 .

[10]  W. Grodd,et al.  Differential amygdala activation in schizophrenia during sadness , 1998, Schizophrenia Research.

[11]  L. J. Chapman,et al.  The measurement of differential deficit. , 1978, Journal of psychiatric research.

[12]  J. Deakin,et al.  Receptive and expressive social communication in schizophrenia. , 1994, Psychopathology.

[13]  P. Ekman,et al.  Handbook of methods in nonverbal behavior research , 1982 .

[14]  C. Frith,et al.  Schizophrenic inability to judge facial emotion: a controlled study. , 1989, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[15]  Pieter J. D. Drenth,et al.  European perspectives in psychology , 1990 .

[16]  G. Bates,et al.  Personality disorders in recent-onset bipolar disorder. , 1990, Comprehensive psychiatry.

[17]  J. Addington,et al.  Facial affect recognition and information processing in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder , 1998, Schizophrenia Research.

[18]  C. Jonsson,et al.  THE ABILITY OF SCHIZOPHRENIC PATIENTS TO INTERPRET INTONATION , 1965, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica.

[19]  J. Borod,et al.  Perception of Facial Emotion in Schizophrenic and Right Brain-Damaged Patients , 1993, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[20]  G. Fricchione,et al.  Aprosodia in eight schizophrenic patients. , 1986, The American journal of psychiatry.

[21]  J. Neale,et al.  Emotion perception in schizophrenia: specific deficit or further evidence of generalized poor performance? , 1993, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[22]  Nigel W. Bond,et al.  A new series of slides depicting facial expressions of affect: A comparison with the pictures of facial affect series , 1993 .

[23]  K. Mueser,et al.  Cue availability and affect perception in schizophrenia. , 1996, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[24]  C. Jonsson,et al.  AUDITORY PERCEPTION IN SCHIZOPHRENIA: A SECOND STUDY OF THE INTONATION TEST , 1973, Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica.

[25]  J. Cutting,et al.  Prosodic comprehension and expression in schizophrenia. , 1990, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[26]  G. Klerman,et al.  Interpersonal psychotherapy of depression , 1984 .

[27]  Nicholas Tarrier,et al.  Handbook of Social Functioning in Schizophrenia , 1998 .

[28]  Michael D. Nelson,et al.  Hippocampal volume reduction in schizophrenia as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging : A meta-analytic study , 1998 .

[29]  K. Scherer,et al.  Recognition of emotion from vocal cues. , 1986, Archives of general psychiatry.

[30]  Edson Amaro,et al.  Event-related fMRI without scanner acoustic noise , 1999 .

[31]  P. Ekman,et al.  American-Japanese cultural differences in intensity ratings of facial expressions of emotion , 1989 .

[32]  J. Block,et al.  Studies in the phenomenology of emotions. , 1957, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[33]  A. Kring,et al.  More evidence for generalized poor performance in facial emotion perception in schizophrenia. , 1996, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[34]  P. McGorry,et al.  The dimensional structure of first episode psychosis: an exploratory factor analysis , 1998, Psychological Medicine.

[35]  M. Bell,et al.  Affect recognition in schizophrenia: a function of global impairment or a specific cognitive deficit , 1997, Psychiatry Research.

[36]  D. Penn,et al.  Emotion recognition and social competence in chronic schizophrenia. , 1996, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[37]  M. Mandal,et al.  Facial expressions of emotions and schizophrenia: a review. , 1998, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[38]  H. Feigl,et al.  Minnesota studies in the philosophy of science , 1956 .

[39]  J. Borod,et al.  Parameters of emotional processing in neuropsychiatric disorders: conceptual issues and a battery of tests. , 1990, Journal of communication disorders.

[40]  H. Ellis,et al.  Paranoid and nonparanoid schizophrenic processing of facially displayed affect. , 1992, Journal of psychiatric research.

[41]  M. Keshavan,et al.  First-episode studies in schizophrenia: criteria and characterization. , 1992, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[42]  A. Leentjens,et al.  Disturbances of affective prosody in patients with schizophrenia; a cross sectional study , 1998, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[43]  K. Mueser,et al.  Deficits in facial-affect recognition and schizophrenia. , 1988, Schizophrenia bulletin.

[44]  S. Haber,et al.  Considering the Role of the Amygdala in Psychotic Illness , 1998 .

[45]  Jacob Cohen,et al.  A power primer. , 1992, Psychological bulletin.

[46]  N. Dershowitz On Connotative Meaning of Emotional Terms to the Blind: A Contribution to the Study of the Phenomenology of Emotion , 1975, Perceptual and motor skills.

[47]  E. Walker,et al.  Facial discrimination and emotional recognition in schizophrenia and affective disorders. , 1986, Archives of general psychiatry.

[48]  D. Luchins,et al.  Facial Affect Recognition in Schizophrenia is there a Differential Deficit? , 1984, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[49]  D. Penn,et al.  Affect recognition in schizophrenia: a synthesis of findings across three studies. , 1997, Psychiatry.

[50]  G. Gates,et al.  Emotional traits and recognition of facial expression of emotion , 1985 .

[51]  N. K. Dor-Shav,et al.  Cross-Cultural Study of Ratings of Phenomenological Experience of Emotion , 1978, Psychological reports.

[52]  P. Whalen Fear, Vigilance, and Ambiguity , 1998 .

[53]  M. Mandal,et al.  Perceptual Skill in Decoding Facial Affect , 1985, Perceptual and motor skills.

[54]  K. Scherer,et al.  How universal and specific is emotional experience? Evidence from 27 countries on five continents , 1986 .

[55]  R P Bentall,et al.  Social cognition in schizophrenia. , 1997, Psychological bulletin.

[56]  J. Pierri,et al.  Magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy in offspring at risk for schizophrenia: Preliminary studies , 1997, Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry.

[57]  A. Young,et al.  Recognition of facial emotion in nine individuals with bilateral amygdala damage , 1999, Neuropsychologia.

[58]  P. Bech,et al.  The mania rating scale: Scale construction and inter-observer agreement , 1978, Neuropharmacology.

[59]  R. F. Stanners,et al.  The time it takes to identify facial expressions: Effects of age, gender of subject, sex of sender, and type of expression , 1985 .

[60]  R. Murray,et al.  Premorbid Social Underachievement in Schizophrenia , 1993, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[61]  M. Shutty,et al.  Affect processing in chronically psychotic patients: development of a reliable assessment tool , 1995, Schizophrenia Research.

[62]  D C Hay,et al.  Movement, face processing and schizophrenia: evidence of a differential deficit in expression analysis. , 1994, The British journal of clinical psychology.

[63]  P. Ekman Pictures of Facial Affect , 1976 .

[64]  J. Borod,et al.  A preliminary comparison of flat affect schizophrenics and brain-damaged patients on measures of affective processing. , 1989, Journal of communication disorders.

[65]  Ruben C. Gur,et al.  Emotional processing in schizophrenia: Neurobehavioral probes in relation to psychopathology , 1995, Schizophrenia Research.

[66]  Paul E. Meehl,et al.  Nuisance variables and the ex post facto design , 1970 .