Author:
Regenbogen Christina,Kellermann Thilo,Seubert Janina,Schneider Daniel A.,Gur Raquel E.,Derntl Birgit,Schneider Frank,Habel Ute
Abstract
BackgroundIndividuals with schizophrenia and people with depression both show
abnormal behavioural and neural responses when perceiving and responding
to emotional stimuli, but pathology-specific differences and
commonalities remain mostly unclear.AimsTo directly compare empathic responses to dynamic multimodal emotional
stimuli in a group with schizophrenia and a group with depression, and to
investigate their neural correlates using functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI).MethodThe schizophrenia group (n = 20), the depression group
(n = 24) and a control group (n =
24) were presented with portrait-shot video clips expressing emotion
through three possible communication channels: facial expression, prosody
and content. Participants rated their own and the actor's emotional state
as an index of empathy.ResultsAlthough no group differences were found in empathy ratings,
characteristic differences emerged in the fMRI activation patterns. The
schizophrenia group demonstrated aberrant activation patterns during the
neutral speech content condition in regions implicated in multimodal
integration and formation of semantic constructs. Those in the depression
group were most affected during conditions with trimodal emotional and
trimodal neutral stimuli, in key regions of the mentalising network.ConclusionsOur findings reveal characteristic differences in patients with
schizophrenia compared with those with depression in their cortical
responses to dynamic affective stimuli. These differences indicate that
impairments in responding to emotional stimuli may be caused by
pathology-specific problems in social cognition.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
26 articles.
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