感知观察者建模揭示抑郁症患者面部表情识别缺陷的可能机制

IF 5.7 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Biological Psychiatry-Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging Pub Date : 2024-06-01 DOI:10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.01.011
Fabian A. Soto , Christopher G. Beevers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:抑郁症患者的面部情绪识别能力存在缺陷是有据可查的,但对其潜在机制却知之甚少。心理物理观察者模型为精确描述这种机制提供了一种方法。通过基于模型的分析,我们检验了抑郁症如何降低检测人脸情绪灵敏度的两种假设:一是通过改变对可诊断情绪的视觉信息的选择性,二是通过改变情绪检测系统的信噪比:方法:60 名成年人(其中一半符合重度抑郁症标准,另一半为健康对照组)在嘈杂的面部刺激中辨别出悲伤和快乐,他们的反应被用来估算用于情感识别的视觉信息编码模板。我们使用传统分析法和基于模型的分析法对这些模板进行了分析;在后者中,模板和刺激物之间的匹配度(代表模板编码信息的感官证据)与行为数据进行了比较:结果:与对照组相比,抑郁症患者估计幸福模板产生的感官证据与反应时间的相关性较低,这表明抑郁症与幸福检测信噪比降低有关。而在检测悲伤情绪时却发现了相反的结果。我们发现,几乎没有证据表明抑郁症伴随着选择性(即用于检测情绪的信息)的变化,但抑郁症与脸部特征对选择性的更强影响有关:结论:抑郁症与情绪识别过程中信噪比的变化有更强的相关性,这表明情绪检测的缺陷主要是由于信号质量下降而不是用于检测情绪的信息采样不理想造成的。
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Perceptual Observer Modeling Reveals Likely Mechanisms of Face Expression Recognition Deficits in Depression

Background

Deficits in face emotion recognition are well documented in depression, but the underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. Psychophysical observer models provide a way to precisely characterize such mechanisms. Using model-based analyses, we tested 2 hypotheses about how depression may reduce sensitivity to detect face emotion: 1) via a change in selectivity for visual information diagnostic of emotion or 2) via a change in signal-to-noise ratio in the system performing emotion detection.

Methods

Sixty adults, one half meeting criteria for major depressive disorder and the other half healthy control participants, identified sadness and happiness in noisy face stimuli, and their responses were used to estimate templates encoding the visual information used for emotion identification. We analyzed these templates using traditional and model-based analyses; in the latter, the match between templates and stimuli, representing sensory evidence for the information encoded in the template, was compared against behavioral data.

Results

Estimated happiness templates produced sensory evidence that was less strongly correlated with response times in participants with depression than in control participants, suggesting that depression was associated with a reduced signal-to-noise ratio in the detection of happiness. The opposite results were found for the detection of sadness. We found little evidence that depression was accompanied by changes in selectivity (i.e., information used to detect emotion), but depression was associated with a stronger influence of face identity on selectivity.

Conclusions

Depression is more strongly associated with changes in signal-to-noise ratio during emotion recognition, suggesting that deficits in emotion detection are driven primarily by deprecated signal quality rather than suboptimal sampling of information used to detect emotion.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.40
自引率
1.70%
发文量
247
审稿时长
30 days
期刊介绍: Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging is an official journal of the Society for Biological Psychiatry, whose purpose is to promote excellence in scientific research and education in fields that investigate the nature, causes, mechanisms, and treatments of disorders of thought, emotion, or behavior. In accord with this mission, this peer-reviewed, rapid-publication, international journal focuses on studies using the tools and constructs of cognitive neuroscience, including the full range of non-invasive neuroimaging and human extra- and intracranial physiological recording methodologies. It publishes both basic and clinical studies, including those that incorporate genetic data, pharmacological challenges, and computational modeling approaches. The journal publishes novel results of original research which represent an important new lead or significant impact on the field. Reviews and commentaries that focus on topics of current research and interest are also encouraged.
期刊最新文献
Table of Contents In This Issue Peak Alpha Frequency in Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, and Healthy Volunteers: Associations With Visual Information Processing and Cognition Macrostructural Brain Morphology as Moderator of the Relationship Between Pandemic-Related Stress and Internalizing Symptomology During COVID-19 in High-Risk Adolescents Impairment of Visual Fixation and Preparatory Saccade Control in Borderline Personality Disorder With and Without Comorbid Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
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