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Selective attention to facial emotion and identity in schizophrenia.
Authors:Jean-Yves Baudouin  Flavie Martin  Guy Tiberghien  Isabelle Verlut  Nicolas Franck
Affiliation:UMR 5015 CNRS, Institut des Sciences Cognitives, 67, bd Pinel, 69 675 Bron Cedex, France. baudouin@isc.cnrs.fr
Abstract:
The selective attention to facial emotion and identity was investigated in 12 patients with schizophrenia and 12 healthy participants. Both patients and controls were required to perform two classification tasks (according either to identity or emotion). Two separate values for identity (person A/person B) and for emotion (fear/anger) were used. When the classification task was on one dimension, the other dimension was either correlated, constant, or orthogonal (Garner WR. The Processing of Information and Structure. Potomac, MD: Erlbaum, 1974, Garner WR. Interaction of stimulus dimensions in concept and choice processes. Cognitive Psychology 1976;8:98-123). Results indicated that both patients and healthy participants had an asymmetrical pattern of performance: they were able to selectively attend to the identity of the face presented, regardless of the emotion expressed on the face, but variation in identity interfered with the classification of facial emotion. Moreover, a correlational study indicated that the identity interference on emotion classification for schizophrenic patients covaried with the severity of their negative symptoms. The selective attention competencies in schizophrenia and the independence hypothesis of emotion and face recognition are discussed in the framework of current face recognition models.
Keywords:Facial emotion   Identity   Schizophrenia
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