Neuroticism and facial emotion recognition in healthy adults

facial emotion recognition Adult Male Neuroticism Adolescent Emotions Recognition, Psychology Middle Aged healthy adult Anxiety Disorders Healthy Volunteers Facial Expression Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Humans Female neuroticism
DOI: 10.1111/eip.12212 Publication Date: 2015-01-14T02:55:04Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractAimThe aim of the present study was to examine whether healthy individuals with higher levels of neuroticism, a robust independent predictor of psychopathology, exhibit altered facial emotion recognition performance.MethodsFacial emotion recognition accuracy was investigated in 104 healthy adults using the Degraded Facial Affect Recognition Task (DFAR). Participants' degree of neuroticism was estimated using neuroticism scales extracted from the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire and the Revised NEO Personality Inventory.ResultsA significant negative correlation between the degree of neuroticism and the percentage of correct answers on DFAR was found only for happy facial expression (significant after applying Bonferroni correction).ConclusionsAltered sensitivity to the emotional context represents a useful and easy way to obtain cognitive phenotype that correlates strongly with inter‐individual variations in neuroticism linked to stress vulnerability and subsequent psychopathology. Present findings could have implication in early intervention strategies and staging models in psychiatry.
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