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Facial emotion recognition and its relationship to cognition and depressive symptoms in patients with Parkinson's disease

  • Jakob Pietschnig
  • , Louisa Schröder
  • , Iris Ratheiser
  • , Ilse Kryspin-Exner
  • , Melanie Pflüger
  • , D Moser
  • , Eduard Auff
  • , W. Pirker
  • , Gisela Pusswald
  • , Johann Lehrner

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Background: Impairments in facial emotion recognition (FER) have been detected in patients with Parkinson disease (PD). Presently, we aim at assessing differences in emotion recognition performance in PD patient groups with and without mild forms of cognitive impairment (MCI) compared to healthy controls.

Methods: Performance on a concise emotion recognition test battery (VERT-K) of three groups of 97 PD patients was compared with an age-equivalent sample of 168 healthy controls. Patients were categorized into groups according to two well-established classifications of MCI according to Petersen's (cognitively intact vs. amnestic MCI, aMCI, vs. non-amnestic MCI, non-aMCI) and Litvan's (cognitively intact vs. single-domain MCI, sMCI, vs. multi-domain MCI, mMCI) criteria. Patients and controls underwent individual assessments using a comprehensive neuropsychological test battery examining attention, executive functioning, language, and memory (Neuropsychological Test Battery Vienna, NTBV), the Beck Depression Inventory, and a measure of premorbid IQ (WST).

Results: Cognitively intact PD patients and patients with MCI in PD (PD-MCI) showed significantly worse emotion recognition performance when compared to healthy controls. Between-groups effect sizes were substantial, showing non-trivial effects in all comparisons (Cohen's ds from 0.31 to 1.22). Moreover, emotion recognition performance was higher in women, positively associated with premorbid IQ and negatively associated with age. Depressive symptoms were not related to FER.

Conclusions: The present investigation yields further evidence for impaired FER in PD. Interestingly, our data suggest FER deficits even in cognitively intact PD patients indicating FER dysfunction prior to the development of overt cognitive dysfunction. Age showed a negative association whereas IQ showed a positive association with FER.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1165-1179
Number of pages15
JournalInternational Psychogeriatrics
Volume28
Issue number7
Early online date18 Mar 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2016

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 302045 Medical psychology
  • 501010 Clinical psychology

Keywords

  • 2 MODES
  • DEFICITS
  • EXPRESSIONS
  • GENDER
  • IMPAIRMENT SUBTYPES
  • INTENSITY
  • PREVALENCE
  • Parkinson's disease
  • facial emotion recognition
  • mild cognitive impairment

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