Perception of biological motion and emotion in mild cognitive impairment and dementia.
Abstract
Participants diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), dementia and controls completed measures that required decoding emotions from point-light displays of bodily motion, and static images of facial affect. Both of these measures tap social cognitive processes that are considered critical for social competency. Consistent with prior literature, both clinical groups were impaired on the static measure of facial affect recognition. The dementia (but not the MCI) group additionally showed difficulties interpreting biological motion cues. However, this did not reflect a specific deficit in decoding emotions, but instead a more generalized difficulty in processing visual motion (both to action and to emotion). These results align with earlier studies showing that visual motion processing is disrupted in dementia, but additionally show for the first time that this extends to the recognition of socially relevant biological motion. The absence of any MCI related impairment on the point-light biological emotion measure (coupled with deficits on the measure of facial affect recognition) also point to a potential disconnect between the processes implicated in the perception of emotion cues from static versus dynamic stimuli. For clinical (but not control) participants, performance on all recognition measures was inversely correlated with level of semantic memory impairment. (JINS, 2012, 18, 1-8).
Links
Authors
Henry JD, Thompson C, Rendell PG, Phillips LH, Carbert J, Sachdev P, Brodaty H
Institution
School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland. julie.henry@uq.edu.au
Source
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society : JINS 18:5 2012 Sep pg 866-73MeSH
Affective SymptomsAged
Aged, 80 and over
Analysis of Variance
Dementia
Facial Expression
Female
Humans
Male
Mental Status Schedule
Middle Aged
Mild Cognitive Impairment
Motion Perception
Neuropsychological Tests
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Perceptual Disorders
Photic Stimulation
Statistics as Topic
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Language
eng
PubMed ID
22687579
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