Center for Psychology at the University of Porto, Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, University of Porto, Rua Alfredo Allen 4200-135, Porto, Portugal.
Neurocognition Unit, Department of Neurology, Hospital de Braga, Rua das Comunidades Lusíadas 133, Braga, Portugal.
J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2022 Jan;28(1):48-61. doi: 10.1017/S135561772100014X. Epub 2021 Mar 4.
The ability to recognize others' emotions is a central aspect of socioemotional functioning. Emotion recognition impairments are well documented in Alzheimer's disease and other dementias, but it is less understood whether they are also present in mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Results on facial emotion recognition are mixed, and crucially, it remains unclear whether the potential impairments are specific to faces or extend across sensory modalities.
In the current study, 32 MCI patients and 33 cognitively intact controls completed a comprehensive neuropsychological assessment and two forced-choice emotion recognition tasks, including visual and auditory stimuli. The emotion recognition tasks required participants to categorize emotions in facial expressions and in nonverbal vocalizations (e.g., laughter, crying) expressing neutrality, anger, disgust, fear, happiness, pleasure, surprise, or sadness.
MCI patients performed worse than controls for both facial expressions and vocalizations. The effect was large, similar across tasks and individual emotions, and it was not explained by sensory losses or affective symptomatology. Emotion recognition impairments were more pronounced among patients with lower global cognitive performance, but they did not correlate with the ability to perform activities of daily living.
These findings indicate that MCI is associated with emotion recognition difficulties and that such difficulties extend beyond vision, plausibly reflecting a failure at supramodal levels of emotional processing. This highlights the importance of considering emotion recognition abilities as part of standard neuropsychological testing in MCI, and as a target of interventions aimed at improving social cognition in these patients.
识别他人情绪的能力是社会情感功能的一个核心方面。在阿尔茨海默病和其他痴呆症中,情绪识别障碍得到了充分的记录,但在轻度认知障碍(MCI)中是否也存在这种障碍还不太清楚。关于面部情绪识别的结果喜忧参半,至关重要的是,目前尚不清楚潜在的障碍是否仅限于面部,还是扩展到了其他感觉模式。
在当前的研究中,32 名 MCI 患者和 33 名认知正常的对照者完成了全面的神经心理学评估和两项强制选择情绪识别任务,包括视觉和听觉刺激。情绪识别任务要求参与者对面部表情和非言语发声(例如笑声、哭声)中的中性、愤怒、厌恶、恐惧、快乐、愉悦、惊讶或悲伤进行情绪分类。
MCI 患者在面部表情和发声方面的表现均劣于对照组。这种影响很大,在任务和单个情绪之间相似,并且不能用感觉丧失或情感症状来解释。情绪识别障碍在整体认知表现较低的患者中更为明显,但与日常生活活动能力无关。
这些发现表明 MCI 与情绪识别困难有关,并且这种困难不仅限于视觉,可能反映了情感处理的超模式水平的失败。这强调了在 MCI 中考虑情绪识别能力作为标准神经心理学测试的一部分的重要性,以及作为针对这些患者改善社会认知的干预目标的重要性。