Psychiatry Research
Volume 190, Issue 2 , Pages 172-176, 30 December 2011

Facial emotion recognition in Chinese with schizophrenia at early and chronic stages of illness

  • Joey Shuk-Yan Leung

      Affiliations

    • Kwai Chung Hospital, Lai King Hill Road, Kwai Chung, New Territories, Hong Kong
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +852 29903000; fax: +852 29598717.
  • ,
  • Tatia M.C. Lee

      Affiliations

    • Laboratory of Neuropsychology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
  • ,
  • Chi-Chiu Lee

      Affiliations

    • Kwai Chung Hospital, Lai King Hill Road, Kwai Chung, New Territories, Hong Kong

Received 18 July 2010; received in revised form 13 May 2011; accepted 2 July 2011. published online 24 October 2011.

Abstract 

Deficits in facial emotion recognition have been recognised in Chinese patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. This study examined the relationship between chronicity of illness and performance of facial emotion recognition in Chinese with schizophrenia. There were altogether four groups of subjects matched for age and gender composition. The first and second groups comprised medically stable outpatients with first-episode schizophrenia (n=50) and their healthy controls (n=26). The third and fourth groups were patients with chronic schizophrenic illness (n=51) and their controls (n=28). The ability to recognise the six prototypical facial emotions was examined using locally validated coloured photographs from the Japanese and Caucasian Facial Expressions of Emotion. Chinese patients with schizophrenia, in both the first-episode and chronic stages, performed significantly worse than their control counterparts on overall facial emotion recognition, (P<0.001), with specific impairment in identifying surprise, fear and disgust. The level of deficit was similar at the two stages of illness. Findings suggest that impaired recognition of facial emotion did not appear to have worsened over the course of disease progression, suggesting that recognition of facial emotion is a rather stable trait of the illness. The emotion-specific deficit may have implications for understanding the social difficulties in schizophrenia.

Keywords: Facial emotion recognition, Schizophrenia, Chinese

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PII: S0165-1781(11)00505-1

doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2011.07.001

Psychiatry Research
Volume 190, Issue 2 , Pages 172-176, 30 December 2011