• Psychiatry research · Apr 2012

    Misperceiving facial affect: effects of laterality and individual differences in susceptibility to visual hallucinations.

    • Abbie L Coy and Samuel B Hutton.
    • School of Psychology, University of Sussex, UK.
    • Psychiatry Res. 2012 Apr 30; 196 (2-3): 225-9.

    AbstractIt has been suggested that certain types of auditory hallucinations may be the by-product of a perceptual system that has evolved to be oversensitive to threat-related stimuli. People with schizophrenia and high schizotypes experience visual as well as auditory hallucinations, and have deficits in processing facial emotions. We sought to determine the relationship between visual hallucination proneness and the tendency to misattribute threat and non-threat related emotions to neutral faces. Participants completed a questionnaire assessing visual hallucination proneness (the Revised Visual Hallucination Scale - RVHS). High scoring individuals (N=64) were compared to low scoring individuals (N=72) on a novel emotion detection task. The high RVHS group made more false positive errors (ascribing emotions to neutral faces) than the low RVHS group, particularly when detecting threat-related emotions. All participants made more false positives when neutral faces were presented to the right visual field than to the left visual field. Our results support continuum models of visual hallucinatory experience in which tolerance for false positives is highest for potentially threatening emotional stimuli and suggest that lateral asymmetries in face processing extend to the misperception of facial emotion.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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