Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.

INTRODUCTION:Recently it has been shown that acute sleep loss has a direct impact on emotional processing in healthy individuals. Here we studied the effect of chronically disturbed sleep on emotional processing by investigating two samples of patients with sleep disorders. METHODS:25 patients with...

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Main Authors: Tatjana Crönlein, Berthold Langguth, Peter Eichhammer, Volker Busch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4830526?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d825a030cfac483db1c509bbbf3025ed2020-11-25T02:33:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01114e015275410.1371/journal.pone.0152754Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.Tatjana CrönleinBerthold LangguthPeter EichhammerVolker BuschINTRODUCTION:Recently it has been shown that acute sleep loss has a direct impact on emotional processing in healthy individuals. Here we studied the effect of chronically disturbed sleep on emotional processing by investigating two samples of patients with sleep disorders. METHODS:25 patients with psychophysiologic insomnia (23 women and 2 men, mean age: 51.6 SD; 10.9 years), 19 patients with sleep apnea syndrome (4 women and 15 men, mean age: 51.9; SD 11.1) and a control sample of 24 subjects with normal sleep (15 women and 9 men, mean age 45.3; SD 8.8) completed a Facial Expressed Emotion Labelling (FEEL) task, requiring participants to categorize and rate the intensity of six emotional expression categories: anger, anxiety, fear, happiness, disgust and sadness. Differences in FEEL score and its subscales among the three samples were analysed using ANOVA with gender as a covariate. RESULTS:Both patients with psychophysiologic insomnia and patients with sleep apnea showed significantly lower performance in the FEEL test as compared to the control group. Differences were seen in the scales happiness and sadness. Patient groups did not differ from each other. CONCLUSION:By demonstrating that previously known effects of acute sleep deprivation on emotional processing can be extended to persons experiencing chronically disturbed sleep, our data contribute to a deeper understanding of the relationship between sleep loss and emotions.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4830526?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tatjana Crönlein
Berthold Langguth
Peter Eichhammer
Volker Busch
spellingShingle Tatjana Crönlein
Berthold Langguth
Peter Eichhammer
Volker Busch
Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tatjana Crönlein
Berthold Langguth
Peter Eichhammer
Volker Busch
author_sort Tatjana Crönlein
title Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
title_short Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
title_full Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
title_fullStr Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
title_full_unstemmed Impaired Recognition of Facially Expressed Emotions in Different Groups of Patients with Sleep Disorders.
title_sort impaired recognition of facially expressed emotions in different groups of patients with sleep disorders.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description INTRODUCTION:Recently it has been shown that acute sleep loss has a direct impact on emotional processing in healthy individuals. Here we studied the effect of chronically disturbed sleep on emotional processing by investigating two samples of patients with sleep disorders. METHODS:25 patients with psychophysiologic insomnia (23 women and 2 men, mean age: 51.6 SD; 10.9 years), 19 patients with sleep apnea syndrome (4 women and 15 men, mean age: 51.9; SD 11.1) and a control sample of 24 subjects with normal sleep (15 women and 9 men, mean age 45.3; SD 8.8) completed a Facial Expressed Emotion Labelling (FEEL) task, requiring participants to categorize and rate the intensity of six emotional expression categories: anger, anxiety, fear, happiness, disgust and sadness. Differences in FEEL score and its subscales among the three samples were analysed using ANOVA with gender as a covariate. RESULTS:Both patients with psychophysiologic insomnia and patients with sleep apnea showed significantly lower performance in the FEEL test as compared to the control group. Differences were seen in the scales happiness and sadness. Patient groups did not differ from each other. CONCLUSION:By demonstrating that previously known effects of acute sleep deprivation on emotional processing can be extended to persons experiencing chronically disturbed sleep, our data contribute to a deeper understanding of the relationship between sleep loss and emotions.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4830526?pdf=render
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