Facial Emotion Recognition and Eye Gaze in Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder With and Without Comorbid Conduct Disorder - 31/07/18

Abstract |
Objective |
Conduct disorder (CD) is associated with impairments in facial emotion recognition. However, CD commonly co-occurs with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); thus, it is unclear whether these impairments are explained by ADHD or by one of its core features—inattention. We explored whether emotion recognition impairments are specific to individuals with ADHD and comorbid CD while also examining the mechanisms that might explain such deficits.
Method |
A total of 63 male and female adolescents with ADHD (mean age = 14.2 years, age range = 11–18 years) and with (ADHD+CD) or without (ADHD) comorbid CD, and 41 typically developing controls (healthy controls [HC]; mean age = 15.5, age range = 11–18 years) performed an emotion recognition task with concurrent eye-tracking.
Results |
Participants with ADHD+CD were less accurate at recognizing fear and neutral faces, and more likely to confuse fear with anger than participants with ADHD alone and HC. Both ADHD subgroups fixated the eye region less than HC. Although there was a negative correlation between ADHD symptom severity and eye fixation duration, only CD severity was inversely related to emotion recognition accuracy.
Conclusion |
Only ADHD participants with comorbid CD showed impairments in emotion recognition, suggesting that these deficits are specific to individuals with conduct problems. However, lack of attention to the eye region of faces appears to be a characteristic of ADHD. These findings suggest that emotion recognition impairments in those with ADHD+CD are related to misinterpretation rather than poor attention, offering interesting opportunities for intervention.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, conduct disorder, emotion recognition, eye gaze, attention
Plan
| This research was supported by a grant (G1000632) from the Medical Research Council awarded to Anita Thapar, Stephanie H. M. van Goozen, and Kate Langley, while further funding for control testing was provided by an Economic and Social Research Council studentship awarded to Jac Airdrie. The funding sources had no role in the study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of data, the writing of the article, or decision to submit the article for publication. |
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| Disclosure: Drs. Airdrie, Langley, Thapar, and van Goozen report no biomedical financial interests or potential conflicts of interest. |
Vol 57 - N° 8
P. 561-570 - août 2018 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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