P-804 - Neurofunctional basis of social cognition in subclinical paranoid ideation and social anxiety - 13/06/12
Résumé |
Introduction |
Impaired social functioning is a hallmark characteristic of several mental disorders including those characterized by paranoid ideation (P) and social anxiety (SA). Social deficits have been related to impaired social cognition.
Objectives |
To investigate the neurofunctional basis of social cognition in people with subclinical P and SA.
Methods |
13 healthy participants with high paranoid ideation; 12 healthy participants with high social anxiety. Procedures and Instruments: Paranoid Thoughts Scale, Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale, Cardiff Anomalous Perceptions Scale. Brain response to social stimuli was investigated with two event-related fMRI experiments with implicit processing of facial. expressions of happiness and anger in two different intensities, and with faces expressing no emotion.
Results |
People with P recruit differentially and positively the Left Lingual (p<0,05 FWEcorr), and close to significant (p<0,06 FWEcorr) the Right Caudate when processing neutral faces. People with SA only showed significant positive differences (p<0,05 FWEcorr) in the Right Inferior frontal gyrus when processing anger stimuli at 100%. When comparing both groups, we did not find significant differences.
Conclusions |
The preliminary results indicate a stronger recruitment of emotional and visual areas in P subjects when processing neutral faces and a stronger recruitment of cognitive processing areas in SA subjects when processing angry faces.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Vol 27 - N° S1
P. 1 - 2012 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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