Liedtke Carla, Kohl Waldemar, Kret Mariska Esther, Koelkebeck Katja
University of Muenster, School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Albert-Schweitzer-Campus 1, Building A 9, 48149 Muenster, Germany.
Leiden University, Cognitive Psychology Unit and Leiden Institute of Brain and Cognition, Postzone C2-S, P.O.Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands.
J Affect Disord. 2018 Feb;227:817-823. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2017.11.085. Epub 2017 Nov 21.
Previous research has shown that context (e.g. culture) can have an impact on speed and accuracy when identifying facial expressions of emotion. Patients with a major depressive disorder (MDD) are known to have deficits in the identification of facial expressions, tending to give rather stereotypical judgments. While healthy individuals perceive situations which conflict with their own cultural values more negatively, this pattern would be even stronger in MDD patients, as their altered mood results in stronger biases. In this study we investigate the effect of cultural contextual cues on emotion identification in depression.
Emotional faces were presented for 100ms to 34 patients with an MDD and matched controls. Stimulus faces were either covered by a cap and scarf (in-group condition) or by an Islamic headdress (niqab; out-group condition). Speed and accuracy were evaluated.
Results showed that across groups, fearful faces were identified faster and with higher accuracy in the out-group than in the in-group condition. Sadness was also identified more accurately in the out-group condition. In comparison, happy faces were more accurately (and tended to be faster) identified in the in-group condition. Furthermore, MDD patients were slower, yet not more accurate in identifying expressions of emotion compared to controls.
All patients were on pharmacological treatment. Participants' political orientation was not included. The experiment differs from real life situations.
While our results underline findings that cultural context has a general impact on emotion identification, this effect was not found to be more prominent in patients with MDD.
先前的研究表明,在识别情绪面部表情时,情境(如文化)会对速度和准确性产生影响。已知重度抑郁症(MDD)患者在识别面部表情方面存在缺陷,倾向于给出相当刻板的判断。虽然健康个体对与自身文化价值观相冲突的情境感知更为负面,但这种模式在MDD患者中会更强烈,因为他们情绪的改变会导致更强的偏差。在本研究中,我们调查文化背景线索对抑郁症患者情绪识别的影响。
向34名MDD患者和匹配的对照组呈现100毫秒的情绪化面孔。刺激面孔要么被帽子和围巾覆盖(内群体条件),要么被伊斯兰头巾(尼卡布;外群体条件)覆盖。评估速度和准确性。
结果表明,在所有组中,与内群体条件相比,外群体条件下恐惧面孔的识别速度更快且准确性更高。悲伤表情在外群体条件下也能更准确地被识别。相比之下,快乐面孔在内群体条件下能更准确地(且往往更快地)被识别。此外,与对照组相比,MDD患者识别情绪表达的速度较慢,但准确性并没有更高。
所有患者都在接受药物治疗。未纳入参与者的政治取向。该实验与现实生活情况不同。
虽然我们的结果强调了文化背景对情绪识别有普遍影响这一发现,但在MDD患者中并未发现这种影响更为显著。