I spy with my little eye: The detection of changes in emotional faces and the influence of facial feedback in Parkinson disease |
| |
Authors: | Maria Kuehne Laura Polotzek Aiden Haghikia Tino Zaehle Janek S. Lobmaier |
| |
Affiliation: | 1. Department of Social Neuroscience and Social Psychology, Institute of Psychology, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland;2. Department of Neurology, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany;3. Department of Neurology, Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences, Magdeburg, Germany |
| |
Abstract: | Background and purpose Parkinson disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder that affects the motor system but also involves deficits in emotional processing such as facial emotion recognition. In healthy participants, it has been shown that facial mimicry, the automatic imitation of perceived facial expressions, facilitates the interpretation of the emotional states of our counterpart. In PD patients, recent studies revealed reduced facial mimicry and consequently reduced facial feedback, suggesting that this reduction might contribute to the prominent emotion recognition deficits found in PD. Methods We investigated the influence of facial mimicry on facial emotion recognition. Twenty PD patients and 20 healthy controls (HCs) underwent a classical facial mimicry manipulation (holding a pen with the lips, teeth, or nondominant hand) while performing an emotional change detection task with faces. Results As expected, emotion recognition was significantly influenced by facial mimicry manipulation in HCs, further supporting the hypothesis of facial feedback and the related theory of embodied simulation. Importantly, patients with PD, generally and independent from the facial mimicry manipulation, were impaired in their ability to detected emotion changes. Our data further show that PD patients' facial emotional recognition abilities are completely unaffected by mimicry manipulation, suggesting that PD patients cannot profit from an artificial modulation of the already impaired facial feedback. Conclusions These findings suggest that it is not the hypomimia and the absence of facial feedback per se, but a disruption of the facial feedback loop, that leads to the prominent emotion recognition deficit in PD patients. |
| |
Keywords: | emotion facial expression facial feedback facial mimicry Parkinson disease |
|
|