Levy Tomer, Dupuis Annie, Andrade Brendan F, Crosbie Jennifer, Kelley Elizabeth, Nicolson Rob, Schachar Russell James
Department of Psychiatry, The Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Ave, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada.
Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2023 Nov;32(11):2271-2280. doi: 10.1007/s00787-022-02033-3. Epub 2022 Sep 1.
The ability to recognize emotions evident in people's faces contributes to social functioning and might be affected by ADHD and irritability. Given their high co-occurrence, we examined the relative contribution of ADHD and irritability to facial emotion recognition (FER). We hypothesized that irritability but not ADHD traits would predict increased likelihood of misrecognizing emotions as negative, and that FER performance would explain the association of ADHD and irritability traits with social skills. FER was measured using the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test (RMET) in children (6-14 years old) referred for ADHD assessment (n = 304) and healthy controls (n = 128). ADHD, irritability and social skills were measured using parent ratings. We used repeated measure logistics regression, comparing the effects across emotion valence of images (i.e., neutral/positive/negative). High irritability but not ADHD diagnosis predicted lower RMET accuracy. ADHD traits predicted lower RMET accuracy in younger but not older participants, whereas irritability predicted poorer accuracy at all ages. ADHD traits predicted lower RMET accuracy across all emotion valences, whereas irritability predicted increased probability of misrecognizing neutral and positive but not negative emotions. Irritability did not increase the probability for erroneously recognizing emotions as negative. ADHD and irritability traits fully explained the association between RMET and social skills. ADHD and irritability traits might impact the ability to identify emotions portrayed in faces. However, irritability traits appear to selectively impair recognition of neutral and positive but not negative emotions. ADHD and irritability are important when examining the link between FER and social difficulties.
识别人们脸上明显情绪的能力有助于社交功能,可能会受到注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)和易怒情绪的影响。鉴于它们的高共现性,我们研究了ADHD和易怒情绪对面部情绪识别(FER)的相对影响。我们假设,易怒情绪而非ADHD特征会预测将情绪误认作负面情绪的可能性增加,并且FER表现将解释ADHD和易怒情绪特征与社交技能之间的关联。在因ADHD评估前来就诊的儿童(6至14岁,n = 304)和健康对照组(n = 128)中,使用“眼睛解读心灵测试”(RMET)来测量FER。使用家长评分来测量ADHD、易怒情绪和社交技能。我们使用重复测量逻辑回归,比较图像情绪效价(即中性/积极/消极)之间的影响。高易怒情绪而非ADHD诊断预测了较低的RMET准确性。ADHD特征在较年轻而非较年长的参与者中预测了较低的RMET准确性,而易怒情绪在所有年龄段都预测了较差的准确性。ADHD特征在所有情绪效价中都预测了较低的RMET准确性,而易怒情绪预测了误认中性和积极情绪而非消极情绪的可能性增加。易怒情绪并没有增加将情绪错误识别为负面情绪的可能性。ADHD和易怒情绪特征充分解释了RMET与社交技能之间的关联。ADHD和易怒情绪特征可能会影响识别面部所描绘情绪的能力。然而,易怒情绪特征似乎选择性地损害了对中性和积极情绪而非消极情绪的识别。在研究FER与社交困难之间的联系时,ADHD和易怒情绪很重要。