Blair R J, Colledge E, Murray L, Mitchell D G
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, England.
J Abnorm Child Psychol. 2001 Dec;29(6):491-8. doi: 10.1023/a:1012225108281.
The processing of emotional expressions is fundamental for normal socialisation and interaction. Reduced responsiveness to the expressions of sadness and fear has been implicated in the development of psychopathy (R. J. R. Blair, 1995). The current study investigates the sensitivity of children with psychopathic tendencies to facial expressions. Children with psychopathic tendencies and a comparison group, as defined by the Psychopathy Screening Device (PSD; P. J. Frick & R. D. Hare, in press), were presented with a cinematic display of a standardised set of facial expressions that depicted sadness, happiness, anger, disgust, fear, and surprise. Participants observed as these facial expressions slowly evolved through 20 successive frames of increasing intensity. The children with psychopathic tendencies presented with selective impairments; they needed significantly more stages before they could successfully recognise the sad expressions and even when the fearful expressions were at full intensity were significantly more likely to mistake them for another expression. These results are interpreted with reference to an amygdala and empathy impairment explanation of psychopathy.
情绪表达的处理对于正常的社交和互动至关重要。对悲伤和恐惧表情反应降低与精神病态的发展有关(R. J. R. 布莱尔,1995年)。当前的研究调查了有精神病态倾向的儿童对面部表情的敏感性。使用精神病态筛查工具(PSD;P. J. 弗里克和R. D. 黑尔,即将出版)定义了有精神病态倾向的儿童和一个对照组,向他们展示了一组标准化面部表情的电影展示,这些表情描绘了悲伤、快乐、愤怒、厌恶、恐惧和惊讶。参与者观察这些面部表情如何通过20个连续的强度递增帧慢慢演变。有精神病态倾向的儿童表现出选择性损伤;他们需要显著更多的阶段才能成功识别悲伤表情,甚至当恐惧表情达到最大强度时,他们将其误认成另一种表情的可能性也显著更高。这些结果是参照杏仁核和共情损伤对精神病态的解释来解读的。