从眼睛推断男性精神分裂症患者的社交信号

IF 3 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Annika Resch, Jonas Moosavi, Alexander N Sokolov, Patrick Steinwand, Erika Wagner, Andreas J Fallgatter, Marina A Pavlova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

非语言交流习惯性地暴露了对方的潜在想法、真实情感和完整性。包括精神分裂症(SZ)在内的多种精神疾病都存在社交认知缺陷。通过眼睛来推断社会信号对于社会交往至关重要,但这方面的研究仍然很少。本研究旨在填补这一空白,研究精神分裂症患者的眼语阅读能力是否会发生改变,如果会,又是如何改变的。我们将研究重点放在男性 SZ 上,这主要是因为这种障碍具有性别特异性。我们对患者和相匹配的典型发育(TD)个体进行了 "读懂眼神中的思想 "测试(RMET-M)和 "蒙面情绪 "任务(EMF),这两项任务提供了可比的视觉信息。研究结果表明,SZ 的情绪识别特征与 TD 相似,对恐惧、中性表情和快乐等情绪的识别比对其他情绪(悲伤和厌恶)的识别更准确。然而,在 SZ 中,这一特征向下偏移:所有情绪的识别准确率都低于 TD。在 RMET-M 中,患者的识别准确率也较低,尽管他们在具有积极情绪的项目上表现较好。仅在 SZ 中,这两项任务的识别准确性是紧密联系在一起的。研究结果表明,患有 SZ 的男性在推断眼睛中的社会信息方面面临着全球性挑战,因此需要制定矫正计划来塑造社会认知能力。这项研究为我们提供了新的视角,帮助我们了解不同性别的精神障碍患者在社会认知方面存在的缺陷。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inferring social signals from the eyes in male schizophrenia.

Nonverbal communication habitually leaks out in ways that expose underlying thoughts, true feelings, and integrity of a counterpart. Social cognition is deficient in a wide range of mental disorders, including schizophrenia (SZ). Inferring social signals through the eyes is pivotal for social interaction but remains poorly investigated. The present work aims to fill this gap by examining whether and, if so, how reading language of the eyes is altered in SZ. We focused on male SZ, primarily because the disorder manifests a gender-specific profile. Patients and matched typically developing (TD) individuals were administered the Reading the Mind in the Eyes Test-Modified (RMET-M) and Emotions in Masked Faces (EMF) task that provide comparable visual information. The findings indicate that in SZ, the emotion recognition profile is similar to TD, with a more accurate recognition of some emotions such as fear, neutral expressions, and happiness than the others (sadness and disgust). In SZ, however, this profile is shifted down: all emotions are recognized less accurately than in TD. On the RMET-M, patients are also less precise, albeit they perform better on items with positive valence. In SZ only, recognition accuracy on both tasks is tightly linked to each other. The outcome reveals global challenges for males with SZ in inferring social information in the eyes and calls for remediation programs to shape social cognition. This work offers novel insights into the profiles of social cognitive deficits in mental disorders that differ in their gender prevalence.

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