An Investigation of Emotion Processing Impairments in Huntington’s Disease
thesis
posted on 2017-03-16, 01:37authored byCatarina Ciala Kordsachia
Huntington's
disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder associated with altered processing
of emotional stimuli. Altered emotion processing in HD includes a
well-established deficit in the ability to recognize emotions from facial
expressions. Subjective experience of emotion is also altered, although
previous studies have indicated both diminished and exaggerated subjective
experiences. The overarching purpose of this thesis was to improve current
knowledge on the processing of emotional stimuli in HD, by answering three
research questions, which are addressed in three papers. For the thesis, data
were collected from 25 participants with the gene-expansion for HD (late
pre-manifest and early diagnosed) and 25 HD gene-negative healthy control
participants.
The first paper addressed the question of whether individuals
with HD, compared to controls, show altered facial muscle responses to emotionally-evocative
scenes and emotionally-expressive faces. Using electromyography (EMG) to
examine facial muscles activity, we found that HD participants displayed lower
activation of the levator labii muscle when viewing disgusting scenes than
control participants, providing evidence for reduced disgust experience in HD.
HD participants also displayed lower EMG responses of the zygomaticus major and
orbicularisoculi muscles in reaction to happy faces and of the frontalis
muscle in reaction to fearful faces. The finding of diminished responsivity to
disgust is relevant to current controversies regarding whether disgust
processing is affected in HD, and the reduced responsivity to happy stimuli may
have implications for social functioning in HD.
The second paper addressed the question of whether
individuals with HD visually scan emotionally-evocative natural scenes
differently than healthy controls. We found that HD participants fixated for a
smaller portion of picture viewing time, and that their scan paths were longer
than those of controls. These findings suggest an enhanced, but unfocussed
search for information in HD. This search for information may constitute a
strategy used by HD participants to compensate for difficulties in evaluating
the stimuli, perhaps due to difficulties with self-reflection.
The third paper addressed the question of whether individuals
with HD display reduced visual scanning of the emotionally most informative
features of human faces than healthy controls. We found that, relative to the
scanning of the whole pictures, the HD participants made a lower number of
fixations on the eye and nose/mouth regions and spent less time looking at
these regions. Further, visual scanning of the eye region was associated with
emotion recognition performance in the HD group, raising the possibility that
scanning of the eyes is insufficient for accurate emotion recognition in HD.
Alternatively, people with HD may show reduced scanning of the eyes because
they are less emotionally engaged with other people, in line with the
significance of eye-contact in social interactions.
Taken together, findings from this research project yielded
several new insights into how individuals with HD process emotion-related
visual stimuli differently than healthy control participants. Some of the
effects observed in HD may be related to similar underlying processes, but
overall the findings suggest that alterations in emotion processing in HD are
nuanced and complex.