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70 Visual Attention and Emotion Recognition Deficits in Patients with Cerebellar Tumors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2023

Aleksandra Bala*
Affiliation:
University of Warsaw, Faculty of Psychology, Warsaw, Poland.
Martyna Wdowska
Affiliation:
University of Warsaw, Faculty of Psychology, Warsaw, Poland.
Agnieszka Olejnik
Affiliation:
University of Warsaw, Faculty of Psychology, Warsaw, Poland.
Andrzej Marchel
Affiliation:
Medical University of Warsaw, Department of Neurosurgery, Warsaw, Poland
*
Correspondence: Aleksandra Bala, University of Warsaw, Faculty of Psychology, abala@psych.uw.edu.pl
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Abstract

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Objective:

Social cognition refers to processing, analyzing and understanding information about emotions and social situations. Many studies indicate a frequent deficit of these functions in people with tumors of the cerebellum. Visual search is an important attention process prior to information processing. It also mediates the relationship between cognitive function (attention) and social cognition. There are numerous data showing that disorders of various aspects of attention are fairly common in patients with tumors of the cerebellum. The question arises whether there is any relationship between these functions. The purpose of this study was to find out if there is a relationship between visual search performance and the ability to recognize emotions.

Participants and Methods:

The study included 19 patients with the cerebello-pontine angle (CPA) tumors (mean age = 38.84, SD = 14.27; 10 women and 9 men) and 19 healthy controls (mean age 38.26, SD = 10.40; 10 women and 9 men). The research group consisted of patients from the Department of Neurosurgery, UCK Medical University of Warsaw, the control group was healthy. The groups did not differ demographically. At the beginning, the respondents completed a questionnaire in which they were asked about demographic data and health status. Then, a series of 40 boards presenting the letters T in two colors, blue and orange, scattered in different planes was presented. The letters were right or upside down. The test person’s task was to find and click the correctly positioned orange T letter as quickly as possible. Then, a series of 56 photos of faces representing seven different emotions was presented (happiness, anger, sadness, surprise, disgust, fear and a neutral face). The test person’s task was to decide which of the emotions mentioned under the photo were presented by the presented face.

Results:

The results indicated that patients with tumors in the CPA area had a longer mean reaction time and lower accuracy when performing visual searches than subjects from the control group. Likewise, there were longer times and lower accuracy in the emotional recognition task. Moreover, in the group of patients with CPA tumor, the response time during visual search was negatively associated with the correctness of the response in visual search (p = -0.57, p <0.05). There were also negative correlations between the reaction time and the correctness of recognizing particular emotional states: anger (p = -0.48, p <0.05), disgust (p = -0.62, p <0.01) and neutral (p = -0.64, p <0.01). The correctness of answers in visual search correlated positively with the accuracy of emotion recognition (p = 0.72, p <0.01). None of the above-mentioned relationships were found in the control group.

Conclusions:

The obtained results indicate a relationship between the quality of visual attention and the ability to recognize emotions in people with cerebellar lesions. In order to better understand this phenomenon, it is necessary to continue research in this field.

Type
Poster Session 01: Medical | Neurological Disorders | Neuropsychiatry | Psychopharmacology
Copyright
Copyright © INS. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2023