Mask-wearing and facial emotion recognition: a preliminary analysis of the relevance of depressive symptoms

Mateus Mazzaferro
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Abstract

Depression is a psychiatric condition that impairs the life of millions of people around the globe. Previous research has shown that depressed individuals tend to present deficits in facial emotion perception. For instance, perception accuracy may be reduced and biases in perceived intensity may be enhanced. Mask-wearing practices initiated in response to the COVID-19 pandemic have become a new social norm often enforced by local mandates. Preliminary studies have shown that mask-wearing may impair facial emotion recognition. In this study, we aimed at understanding how facial emotion recognition impairment interacts with depressive symptoms in a sample of German adolescents and adults (N = 91, 56% female, mean age of 32.7 years) by utilizing a mixed-effects linear regression analysis. We found evidence that mask-wearing may be a limiting factor for facial emotion recognition, as well as for emotion intensity ratings. However, a significant association of depressive symptoms with these outcome variables was not detected. Still, larger sample sizes may have the potential to substantiate a trend toward an interaction of depressive symptoms and mask-wearing for the rating of happy faces. Future research should be committed to psychophysiological processes and to improving the quality of the stimulus material.
戴口罩与面部情绪识别:抑郁症状相关性的初步分析
抑郁症是一种精神疾病,影响着全球数百万人的生活。先前的研究表明,抑郁症患者往往在面部情绪感知方面存在缺陷。例如,感知准确性可能会降低,感知强度的偏差可能会增强。为应对COVID-19大流行而发起的戴口罩做法已成为一种新的社会规范,通常由地方强制执行。初步研究表明,戴口罩可能会损害面部情绪识别能力。在这项研究中,我们旨在通过混合效应线性回归分析,了解面部情绪识别障碍如何与德国青少年和成年人(N = 91, 56%女性,平均年龄32.7岁)的抑郁症状相互作用。我们发现有证据表明,戴口罩可能是面部情绪识别和情绪强度评级的限制因素。然而,没有发现抑郁症状与这些结果变量之间的显著关联。尽管如此,更大的样本量可能有可能证实抑郁症状和戴口罩对快乐面孔评级的相互作用趋势。未来的研究应致力于心理生理过程和提高刺激材料的质量。
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