Misattribution of emotional over-arousal to neutral faces in acute paranoid schizophrenia psychosis.

Haralanova, Evelina; Milushev, Emil; Martín Gargiulo, Ángel J.; Lucrecia Gargiulo, Mercedes M.; Ítalo Gargiulo, Augusto P.; Josué Gargiulo, Marcos C.; Guevara, Manuel A.; Landa De Gargiulo, Adriana I.; López, Norman D.; Lafuente, José V.; Gargiulo, Pascual Á.; Haralanov, Svetlozar

Keywords: schizophrenia, stimuli, perception, Neutral, delusion, misattribution, emotional salience.

Abstract

Introduction: Misattribution of motivational salience to non-salient (neutral) stimuli could be viewed as a hallmark of psychosis in schizophrenia. Studies have recently revealed increased subjective experience of emotional arousal (EA) to neutral social stimuli in paranoid schizophrenia psychosis, suggesting a misattribution of emotional salience to them. We examined this phenomenon directly by quantifying the level of EA subjectively attributed to low-arousal, neutral-valenced faces. Subjects and Methods: A task for EA attribution to neutral (in the context of affective) facial expressions was applied to 44 actively psychotic paranoid schizophrenia inpatients and 44 well-matched healthy controls. Results: Psychotic patients, compared with healthy controls, rated the neutral faces as more aroused (t (86) = 3.15, p =.001) thus misattributing emotional salience to them. Discussion: This finding supports the hypothesis that over-assignment of EA to neutral faces could be viewed as a subclinical affective mechanism of the clinically manifested experience of delusional perception. Conclusion: The study provides the first direct empirical evidence for misattribution of emotional salience in terms of over-attribution of EA to neutral faces during acute paranoid schizophrenia psychosis.

Más información

Volumen: 35
Número: 4
Editorial: Medicinska Naklada Zagreb
Fecha de publicación: 2023
Página de inicio: 515
Página final: 522
Idioma: Inglés
URL: https://www.psychiatria-danubina.com/UserDocsImages/pdf/dnb_vol35_no4/dnb_vol35_no4_515.pdf
DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24869/psyd.2023.515

Notas: Indexed in Scopus.