Centre for Human Brain Health, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK.
Child Neuropsychology Section, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University Hospital, RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry. 2023 Dec;32(12):2523-2536. doi: 10.1007/s00787-022-02132-1. Epub 2023 Feb 4.
Evidence of alterations in emotion processing in maltreated youth has been hypothesized to reflect latent vulnerability for psychopathology. However, previous studies have not systematically examined the influence of psychopathology on the results. Here, we examined emotion recognition and learning in youth who differed in terms of presence vs. absence of maltreatment and psychopathology and tested for potential sex effects. Maltreatment and psychopathology were assessed in 828 youth (514 females) aged 9-18 years using diagnostic interviews and self- and parent-report questionnaires. Emotion recognition was assessed via identification of morphed facial expressions of six universal emotions. For emotion learning, reward and punishment values were assigned to novel stimuli and participants had to learn to correctly respond/withhold response to stimuli to maximize points. A three-way interaction of maltreatment by psychopathology by emotion indicated that when psychopathology was low, maltreated youth were less accurate than non-maltreated youth for happy, fear and disgust. A three-way interaction of sex, maltreatment and emotion indicated that maltreated girls and boys were impaired for fear, but girls showed an impairment for happy, while boys for disgust. There were no effects of maltreatment, psychopathology, or sex on reward learning. However, a two-way interaction between sex and maltreatment showed that maltreated girls were worse at learning from punishment relative to non-maltreated girls, while maltreated boys were better than non-maltreated boys. The study provides the first clear evidence of latent-vulnerability in emotion recognition in maltreated youth and suggests that girls and boys might be characterized by distinct profiles of emotion recognition and learning following maltreatment.
虐待儿童的青少年情绪处理的改变的证据被假设为反映了潜在的精神病理学易感性。然而,之前的研究并没有系统地检查精神病理学对结果的影响。在这里,我们检查了在虐待和精神病理学存在与否方面存在差异的青少年的情绪识别和学习,并测试了潜在的性别效应。通过识别六种通用表情的变形面部表情,使用诊断访谈和自我报告和父母报告问卷评估了 828 名 9-18 岁的青少年(514 名女性)的虐待和精神病理学。对于情绪学习,奖励和惩罚值被分配给新的刺激物,参与者必须学习正确地对刺激物做出反应/不反应以最大化分数。情绪的虐待、精神病理学和性别三向交互表明,当精神病理学较低时,受虐待的青少年在识别快乐、恐惧和厌恶表情方面的准确性低于未受虐待的青少年。性别、虐待和情绪的三向交互表明,受虐待的女孩和男孩在恐惧方面受到了损伤,但女孩在快乐方面受损,而男孩在厌恶方面受损。虐待、精神病理学或性别对奖励学习没有影响。然而,性别和虐待之间的双向交互表明,受虐待的女孩相对于未受虐待的女孩,从惩罚中学习的能力更差,而受虐待的男孩比未受虐待的男孩更好。该研究首次提供了受虐待青少年情绪识别中潜在脆弱性的明确证据,并表明女孩和男孩可能具有不同的情绪识别和学习特征。