Sanders Gavin D, Rapport Lisa J, Lumley Mark A, Hanks Robin A, Langenecker Scott A, Broomfield Robiann R, Radigan Lauren J
Department of Psychology, Wayne State University.
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Wayne State University.
Neuropsychology. 2025 May;39(4):347-358. doi: 10.1037/neu0000998. Epub 2025 Feb 27.
Adults with traumatic brain injury (TBI) often show deficits in recognition of facial emotion, but their ability to emotions is poorly understood. Furthermore, there are no practicable tasks that measure this ability. This study examined the construct of memory for emotions using a novel Facial Recognition and Memory for Emotion (FRAME) test.
Participants were 53 adults with complicated mild-to-severe TBI and a comparison group of 64 neurologically healthy adults. The FRAME and a neuropsychological battery were administered to participants. Analyses included zero-order and partial correlations, as well as group comparisons. A series of hierarchical logistic regressions evaluated the incremental utility of the FRAME in distinguishing adults with and without TBI.
Adults with TBI performed worse than healthy participants across FRAME indices. Processing speed was the strongest correlate of both emotion recognition and memory for emotion. The FRAME demonstrated a pattern of correlations with cognitive tests supporting convergent and discriminant validity of the concept that memory for emotion is distinct from the simple perception of it. Hierarchical logistic regression models showed that memory for emotion accounted for unique variance in group membership beyond emotion recognition accuracy, memory for nonemotional faces, and verbal delayed recall.
Support was found for the construct validity of a novel performance-based assessment measure of recognition and memory for facial displays of emotion. We conclude that memory for facial emotions represents a unique aspect of social cognition, distinct from accurate recognition of facial emotions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
创伤性脑损伤(TBI)成人患者常常在面部情绪识别方面表现出缺陷,但其对情绪的记忆能力却鲜为人知。此外,尚无可行的任务来测量这种能力。本研究使用一种新颖的面部情绪识别与记忆(FRAME)测试,对情绪记忆的结构进行了检验。
参与者包括53名患有复杂轻度至重度TBI的成人以及一个由64名神经健康的成人组成的对照组。对参与者进行了FRAME测试和一套神经心理测验。分析包括零阶和偏相关,以及组间比较。一系列分层逻辑回归评估了FRAME在区分有无TBI成人方面的增量效用。
在FRAME各项指标上,TBI成人的表现均不如健康参与者。处理速度是情绪识别和情绪记忆的最强相关因素。FRAME显示出与认知测试的一种相关模式,支持了情绪记忆这一概念的聚合效度和区分效度,即情绪记忆不同于对情绪的简单感知。分层逻辑回归模型表明,情绪记忆在区分组成员方面解释了独特的方差变异,超出了情绪识别准确性、非情绪面孔记忆和言语延迟回忆的影响范围。
研究结果支持了一种基于表现的新颖评估方法在面部情绪展示识别与记忆方面的结构效度。我们得出结论认为,面部情绪记忆代表了社会认知的一个独特方面,不同于对面部情绪的准确识别。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)