Age-Related Positivity Bias in Emotion Recognition Is Linked to Lower Cognitive Performance and Altered Amygdala-Orbitofrontal Connectivity.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Noham Wolpe, Daniel Harlev, Eyal Bergmann, Richard N Henson
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Abstract

Changes in emotion recognition are observed in aging, in dementia, after brain lesions and as a function of mental health factors, such as depression. In aging, older adults have been argued to show a "positivity bias," which has been associated with a relatively spared recognition accuracy for positive emotion and an increased tendency to label emotions as positive. This bias has been suggested to support mental well-being. However, it has also been found in association with cognitive decline and brain lesions. Here, we investigated the behavioral and brain correlates of this age-related positivity bias. We used multimodal brain imaging in a large group of human adults (n = 665, 333 females) drawn from a population-derived cohort across the lifespan, together with a psychometric analysis of an emotion recognition task using facial expressions. Beyond reductions in expression recognition accuracy, older adults showed increased perceptual thresholds for negative emotions and a reduced threshold for the positive emotion, even after accounting for general face recognition abilities. This positivity bias in labeling emotions was strongly associated with lower cognitive performance in older people, but not with (nonclinical) depressive symptoms. It was also associated with reduced gray matter volume in the bilateral anterior hippocampus-amygdala and increased functional connectivity between these regions and the orbitofrontal cortex. Together, age-related positivity bias is associated with cognitive decline and structural and functional brain differences. A positivity bias in emotion recognition may therefore reflect an early marker of neurodegeneration, a hypothesis that could be tested in future longitudinal studies.

情绪识别中与年龄相关的积极偏见与认知能力下降和杏仁核-眼窝额叶连通性改变有关。
在衰老、痴呆、脑损伤后以及抑郁症等心理健康因素的作用下,可以观察到情绪识别的变化。有人认为,老年人表现出“积极偏见”,这与对积极情绪的识别准确度相对较低有关,并且更倾向于将情绪贴上积极的标签。这种偏见被认为支持老年人的心理健康。然而,它也被发现与认知能力下降和脑部病变有关。在这里,我们研究了这种与年龄相关的积极偏见的大脑相关因素。我们对大量成年人(n= 665,333名女性)进行了多模态脑成像,并对使用面部表情的情绪识别任务进行了心理测量分析。除了表情识别准确性的整体下降外,老年人对负面情绪的感知阈值显著增加,对积极情绪的感知阈值显著降低,即使在考虑了一般的面部识别能力之后也是如此。这种标记情绪的积极偏见与老年人较低的认知表现密切相关,但与(非临床)抑郁症状无关。它还与双侧海马前部-杏仁核灰质体积减少以及这些区域与眶额皮质之间的功能连通性增加有关。总之,这种与年龄相关的积极偏见与认知能力下降、大脑结构和功能差异有关。因此,情绪识别中的积极偏见可能反映了神经变性的早期标志;这一假设可以在未来的纵向研究中得到验证。情绪认知随着年龄的增长而变化,老年人表现出“积极偏见”——对消极情绪的认知减少,对积极情绪的标签偏见。虽然这被认为是一种支持情绪健康的适应性机制,但新出现的证据表明,这可能是认知能力下降或神经退化的信号。通过基于人群的大队列研究(n=665)、多模态脑成像和心理物理情绪识别任务,我们发现与年龄相关的积极偏见增加与认知能力下降密切相关,但与抑郁症状无关。此外,这种偏差与海马前部-杏仁核的结构和功能连通性的差异有关。这些发现表明,积极偏倚可能是神经退行性变的早期标志,对年龄相关认知衰退的早期发现和干预具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1164
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: JNeurosci (ISSN 0270-6474) is an official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. It is published weekly by the Society, fifty weeks a year, one volume a year. JNeurosci publishes papers on a broad range of topics of general interest to those working on the nervous system. Authors now have an Open Choice option for their published articles
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