The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion

Both healthy aging and dementia cause problems with emotion perception, and the impairment is generally greater for specific emotions (anger, sadness and fear). Most studies to date have focused on static facial photographs of emotions. The current study investigated the effects of healthy aging and...

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Main Authors: Pauline M. Insch, Gillian Slessor, Louise H. Phillips, Anthony Atkinson, Jill Warrington
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2015-08-01
Series:AIMS Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/neuroscience/article/382/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-6300269ebe6b4cf7afb17d1d6b92b9642020-11-25T01:12:33ZengAIMS PressAIMS Neuroscience2373-79722015-08-012313915210.3934/Neuroscience.2015.3.139201503139The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily MotionPauline M. Insch0Gillian Slessor1Louise H. Phillips2Anthony Atkinson3Jill Warrington4School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, ScotlandSchool of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, ScotlandSchool of Psychology, University of Aberdeen, ScotlandDepartment of Psychology, Durham University, EnglanRoyal Cornhill Hospital, Aberdeen, ScotlanBoth healthy aging and dementia cause problems with emotion perception, and the impairment is generally greater for specific emotions (anger, sadness and fear). Most studies to date have focused on static facial photographs of emotions. The current study investigated the effects of healthy aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD) on the ability to decode emotions from bodily motion displayed by point light stimuli. Response biases were controlled to investigate whether these influenced the specificity of impairment in perceiving individual emotions. Study 1 compared healthy young and older adults, and Study 2 people with AD and age-matched controls, on an emotion perception task using point light stimuli. Accuracy and the pattern of errors were investigated. Specific age-related impairments were found in labeling sadness, anger and fear from point light displays. Response biases were also found, and controlling for these biases indicated that older adults were worse at labeling all emotions. People with AD were less accurate than healthy older controls at labeling fear, anger and sadness. After controlling for response biases, AD caused impairment in perceiving all emotions. These results indicate a general age-related impairment in decoding emotions from bodily motion, and a further impairment in this skill in AD. Apparent specificity of deficits in emotion labeling tasks needs to be interpreted cautiously, and correction for response bias should be considered. Problems perceiving emotion cues from biological motion might impair social interaction in older adults, particularly those with dementia.http://www.aimspress.com/neuroscience/article/382/fulltext.htmlolder adultsAlzheimer's diseasedementiaemotionssocial perceptionbiological motionmotion perceptionresponse bias
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pauline M. Insch
Gillian Slessor
Louise H. Phillips
Anthony Atkinson
Jill Warrington
spellingShingle Pauline M. Insch
Gillian Slessor
Louise H. Phillips
Anthony Atkinson
Jill Warrington
The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
AIMS Neuroscience
older adults
Alzheimer's disease
dementia
emotions
social perception
biological motion
motion perception
response bias
author_facet Pauline M. Insch
Gillian Slessor
Louise H. Phillips
Anthony Atkinson
Jill Warrington
author_sort Pauline M. Insch
title The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
title_short The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
title_full The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
title_fullStr The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Aging and Alzheimer's Disease on Decoding Emotion Cues from Bodily Motion
title_sort impact of aging and alzheimer's disease on decoding emotion cues from bodily motion
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Neuroscience
issn 2373-7972
publishDate 2015-08-01
description Both healthy aging and dementia cause problems with emotion perception, and the impairment is generally greater for specific emotions (anger, sadness and fear). Most studies to date have focused on static facial photographs of emotions. The current study investigated the effects of healthy aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD) on the ability to decode emotions from bodily motion displayed by point light stimuli. Response biases were controlled to investigate whether these influenced the specificity of impairment in perceiving individual emotions. Study 1 compared healthy young and older adults, and Study 2 people with AD and age-matched controls, on an emotion perception task using point light stimuli. Accuracy and the pattern of errors were investigated. Specific age-related impairments were found in labeling sadness, anger and fear from point light displays. Response biases were also found, and controlling for these biases indicated that older adults were worse at labeling all emotions. People with AD were less accurate than healthy older controls at labeling fear, anger and sadness. After controlling for response biases, AD caused impairment in perceiving all emotions. These results indicate a general age-related impairment in decoding emotions from bodily motion, and a further impairment in this skill in AD. Apparent specificity of deficits in emotion labeling tasks needs to be interpreted cautiously, and correction for response bias should be considered. Problems perceiving emotion cues from biological motion might impair social interaction in older adults, particularly those with dementia.
topic older adults
Alzheimer's disease
dementia
emotions
social perception
biological motion
motion perception
response bias
url http://www.aimspress.com/neuroscience/article/382/fulltext.html
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