TY - JOUR
T1 - How major depressive disorder affects the ability to decode multimodal dynamic emotional stimuli
AU - Scibelli, Filomena
AU - Troncone, Alda
AU - Likforman-Sulem, Laurence
AU - Vinciarelli, Alessandro
AU - Esposito, Anna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Scibelli, Troncone, Likforman-Sulem, Vinciarelli and Esposito.
PY - 2016/1/1
Y1 - 2016/1/1
N2 - Most studies investigating the processing of emotions in depressed patients reported impairments in the decoding of negative emotions. However, these studies adopted static stimuli (mostly stereotypical facial expressions corresponding to basic emotions) which do not reflect the way people experience emotions in everyday life. For this reason, this work proposes to investigate the decoding of emotional expressions in patients affected by recurrent major depressive disorder (RMDD) using dynamic audio/video stimuli. RMDDs' performance is compared with the performance of patients with adjustment disorder with depressed mood (ADs) and healthy (HCs) subjects. The experiments involve 27 RMDDs (16 with acute depression - RMDD-A and 11 in a compensation phase - RMDD-C), 16 Ads, and 16 HCs. The ability to decode emotional expressions is assessed through an emotion recognition task based on short audio (without video), video (without audio), and audio/video clips. The results show that AD patients are significantly less accurate than HCs in decoding fear, anger, happiness, surprise, and sadness. RMDD-As with acute depression are significantly less accurate than HCs in decoding happiness, sadness, and surprise. Finally, no significant differences were found between HCs and RMDD-Cs in a compensation phase. The different communication channels and the types of emotion play a significant role in limiting the decoding accuracy.
AB - Most studies investigating the processing of emotions in depressed patients reported impairments in the decoding of negative emotions. However, these studies adopted static stimuli (mostly stereotypical facial expressions corresponding to basic emotions) which do not reflect the way people experience emotions in everyday life. For this reason, this work proposes to investigate the decoding of emotional expressions in patients affected by recurrent major depressive disorder (RMDD) using dynamic audio/video stimuli. RMDDs' performance is compared with the performance of patients with adjustment disorder with depressed mood (ADs) and healthy (HCs) subjects. The experiments involve 27 RMDDs (16 with acute depression - RMDD-A and 11 in a compensation phase - RMDD-C), 16 Ads, and 16 HCs. The ability to decode emotional expressions is assessed through an emotion recognition task based on short audio (without video), video (without audio), and audio/video clips. The results show that AD patients are significantly less accurate than HCs in decoding fear, anger, happiness, surprise, and sadness. RMDD-As with acute depression are significantly less accurate than HCs in decoding happiness, sadness, and surprise. Finally, no significant differences were found between HCs and RMDD-Cs in a compensation phase. The different communication channels and the types of emotion play a significant role in limiting the decoding accuracy.
KW - Adjustment disorder with depressed mood
KW - Basic emotions
KW - Communication channels
KW - Dynamic stimuli
KW - Emotion recognition task
KW - Emotional decoding bias
KW - Recurrent major depressive disorder
U2 - 10.3389/fict.2016.00016
DO - 10.3389/fict.2016.00016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85051844389
SN - 2297-198X
VL - 3
JO - Frontiers in ICT
JF - Frontiers in ICT
IS - SEP
M1 - 16
ER -