Variation of temporal order reveals deficits in categorisation of facial expressions in patients afflicted with depression

Pegah Sarkheil*, Niclas Kilian-Hutten, Kristina Mickartz, Thomas Vornholt, Klaus Mathiak

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Introduction: It is well established that depressive disorders are associated with abnormalities in the processing of affective information. However, type of stimuli, perceptual complexity and cognitive demand are important factors in evaluating these findings. In particular, processing mechanisms of perceptual boundaries in ecologically valid face stimuli are largely unknown in depression.Methods: In the current study, intensity-ordered frame sequences provided a dynamic visualisation of happy or sad facial expressions fading from or to neutral expressions. Patients (n=20) with major depression (MD) disorder and controls (n=20) indicated their perceptual boundaries between neutral and emotional face depending on direction and emotion. The averaged time of the perceptual boundary entered a groupxcondition ANOVA and regression analysis.Results: MD group did not systematically shift perceptual boundaries in the dynamic emotional faces but yielded altered statistics in information processing. The Gaussian distribution of boundary judgements was disturbed in depression, increasing goodness-of-fit errors in disappearing emotions. Goodness-of-fit correlated with depression symptom score (Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II)) in the MD group during the disappearing sad (r(18)=46, p=0.04) and happy (r(18)=51, p=0.02) conditions.Conclusion: We evaluated detection of appearing and disappearing emotions in dynamic faces. A deviant distribution of categorisation responses emerged in the MD group, which was not emotion-specific. Such a perceptional uncertainty can impede individuals' functioning in interpersonal interaction.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)154-164
Number of pages11
JournalCognitive Neuropsychiatry
Volume23
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Depression
  • facial expression
  • dynamic face
  • categorisation boundary
  • emotion detection
  • emotion bias
  • MAJOR DEPRESSION
  • CATEGORICAL PERCEPTION
  • EMOTION PERCEPTION
  • SOCIAL PHOBIA
  • RECOGNITION
  • FACES
  • DISORDER
  • STIMULI
  • MOTION
  • BIASES

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