Schwartz Rachel, Rothermich Kathrin, Kotz Sonja A, Pell Marc D
a School of Communication Sciences and Disorders , McGill University , Montréal , QC , Canada.
b Department of Complex Care , Lucile Packard Children's Hospital Stanford, Stanford Children's Health , Palo Alto , CA , USA.
J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2018 Apr;40(3):303-316. doi: 10.1080/13803395.2017.1343802. Epub 2017 Jul 1.
Recognizing emotions in others is a pivotal part of socioemotional functioning and plays a central role in social interactions. It has been shown that individuals suffering from Parkinson's disease (PD) are less accurate at identifying basic emotions such as fear, sadness, and happiness; however, previous studies have predominantly assessed emotion processing using unimodal stimuli (e.g., pictures) that do not reflect the complexity of real-world processing demands. Dynamic, naturalistic stimuli (e.g., movies) have been shown to elicit stronger subjective emotional experiences than unimodal stimuli and can facilitate emotion recognition.
In this experiment, pupil measurements of PD patients and matched healthy controls (HC) were recorded while they watched short film clips. Participants' task was to identify the emotion elicited by each clip and rate the intensity of their emotional response. We explored (a) how PD affects subjective emotional experience in response to dynamic, ecologically valid film stimuli, and (b) whether there are PD-related changes in pupillary response, which may contribute to the differences in emotion processing reported in the literature.
Behavioral results showed that identification of the felt emotion as well as perceived intensity varies by emotion, but no significant group effect was found. Pupil measurements revealed differences in dilation depending on the emotion evoked by the film clips (happy, tender, sadness, fear, and neutral) for both groups.
Our results suggest that differences in emotional response may be negligible when PD patients and healthy controls are presented with dynamic, ecologically valid emotional stimuli. Given the limited data available on pupil response in PD, this study provides new evidence to suggest that the PD-related deficits in emotion processing reported in the literature may not translate to real-world differences in physiological or subjective emotion processing in early-stage PD patients.
识别他人的情绪是社会情感功能的关键部分,在社会互动中起着核心作用。研究表明,帕金森病(PD)患者在识别恐惧、悲伤和快乐等基本情绪时准确性较低;然而,以往的研究主要使用单峰刺激(如图像)来评估情绪处理,这种刺激无法反映现实世界处理需求的复杂性。动态、自然主义的刺激(如电影)已被证明比单峰刺激能引发更强烈的主观情感体验,并有助于情绪识别。
在本实验中,记录了帕金森病患者和匹配的健康对照者(HC)在观看短片剪辑时的瞳孔测量数据。参与者的任务是识别每个剪辑引发的情绪,并对其情绪反应的强度进行评分。我们探究了:(a)帕金森病如何影响对动态、生态有效的电影刺激的主观情感体验;(b)瞳孔反应是否存在与帕金森病相关的变化,这可能导致文献中报道的情绪处理差异。
行为结果表明,对所感受到的情绪的识别以及感知到的强度因情绪而异,但未发现显著的组间效应。瞳孔测量显示,两组在瞳孔扩张方面存在差异,这取决于电影剪辑引发的情绪(快乐、温柔、悲伤、恐惧和中性)。
我们的结果表明,当帕金森病患者和健康对照者面对动态、生态有效的情感刺激时,情绪反应的差异可能微不足道。鉴于关于帕金森病患者瞳孔反应的现有数据有限,本研究提供了新的证据,表明文献中报道的帕金森病相关的情绪处理缺陷可能不会转化为早期帕金森病患者在生理或主观情绪处理方面的现实差异。