Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage

<p>According to the facial feedback hypothesis, disruption of the afferent connection from the facial muscles, which is a consequence of facial nerve damage, can reduce the emotional response or decrease its intensity, which is also confirmed by studies of patients who received botu...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A.A. Rakhmanina, A.B. Kholmogorova, L.B. Zavaliy
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Moscow State University of Psychology and Education 2024-12-01
Series:Экспериментальная психология
Online Access:https://psyjournals.ru/en/journals/exppsy/archive/2024_n4/Rakhmanina_Kholmogorova_Zavaliy
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841526709857288192
author A.A. Rakhmanina
A.B. Kholmogorova
L.B. Zavaliy
author_facet A.A. Rakhmanina
A.B. Kholmogorova
L.B. Zavaliy
author_sort A.A. Rakhmanina
collection DOAJ
description <p>According to the facial feedback hypothesis, disruption of the afferent connection from the facial muscles, which is a consequence of facial nerve damage, can reduce the emotional response or decrease its intensity, which is also confirmed by studies of patients who received botulinum toxin injections. The results of studies of emotion recognition in patients with facial nerve damage are contradictory and do not take into account other factors that may affect the recognition process. The aim of this study is to identify the features of emotion recognition by faces and the severity of emotional maladaptation symptoms in patients with facial nerve impairment. The study sample consisted of a control group of healthy respondents (N = 37) and a main group - 30 patients with facial nerve damage (neuropathy, hemifacial spasm, 80% of them with severity of damage of III-VI degree). To assess the severity of emotional maladjustment, the following scales were used: A. Leary's Fear of Negative Evaluation, A. Beck's Depression, and Situational Dissatisfaction with One's Appearance (SIBID); to assess the ability to understand and recognize emotions, the Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) and N.S. Kurek's Method of Recognizing Emotions by Facial Expressions were used. Compared with the control group, patients with facial nerve damage had higher rates of alexithymia and were also worse at recognizing high intensity contempt. Compared with the control group, they had significantly higher rates of social anxiety (fear of negative evaluation) and depression. The obtained results allow us to draw preliminary conclusions that patients with facial nerve damage have a reduced ability to recognize emotions, which may be associated with both a disruption of efferent connections from the facial nerve and symptoms of emotional maladaptation.</p>
format Article
id doaj-art-a2c8b7cda54a41b1bd78fdeb72e460d6
institution Kabale University
issn 2072-7593
2311-7036
language Russian
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Moscow State University of Psychology and Education
record_format Article
series Экспериментальная психология
spelling doaj-art-a2c8b7cda54a41b1bd78fdeb72e460d62025-01-16T12:30:31ZrusMoscow State University of Psychology and EducationЭкспериментальная психология2072-75932311-70362024-12-0117419020710.17759/exppsy.2024170413Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve DamageA.A. Rakhmanina0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7870-402XA.B. Kholmogorova1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5194-0199L.B. Zavaliy2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8572-7094N.V. Sklifosovsky Research Institute of Emergency MedicineMoscow State University of Psychology &amp; EducationSklifosovsky Research Institute of Emergency Care <p>According to the facial feedback hypothesis, disruption of the afferent connection from the facial muscles, which is a consequence of facial nerve damage, can reduce the emotional response or decrease its intensity, which is also confirmed by studies of patients who received botulinum toxin injections. The results of studies of emotion recognition in patients with facial nerve damage are contradictory and do not take into account other factors that may affect the recognition process. The aim of this study is to identify the features of emotion recognition by faces and the severity of emotional maladaptation symptoms in patients with facial nerve impairment. The study sample consisted of a control group of healthy respondents (N = 37) and a main group - 30 patients with facial nerve damage (neuropathy, hemifacial spasm, 80% of them with severity of damage of III-VI degree). To assess the severity of emotional maladjustment, the following scales were used: A. Leary's Fear of Negative Evaluation, A. Beck's Depression, and Situational Dissatisfaction with One's Appearance (SIBID); to assess the ability to understand and recognize emotions, the Alexithymia Scale (TAS-20) and N.S. Kurek's Method of Recognizing Emotions by Facial Expressions were used. Compared with the control group, patients with facial nerve damage had higher rates of alexithymia and were also worse at recognizing high intensity contempt. Compared with the control group, they had significantly higher rates of social anxiety (fear of negative evaluation) and depression. The obtained results allow us to draw preliminary conclusions that patients with facial nerve damage have a reduced ability to recognize emotions, which may be associated with both a disruption of efferent connections from the facial nerve and symptoms of emotional maladaptation.</p>https://psyjournals.ru/en/journals/exppsy/archive/2024_n4/Rakhmanina_Kholmogorova_Zavaliy
spellingShingle A.A. Rakhmanina
A.B. Kholmogorova
L.B. Zavaliy
Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
Экспериментальная психология
title Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
title_full Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
title_fullStr Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
title_full_unstemmed Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
title_short Severity of Emotional Maladaptation and Ability to Recognize Emotions in Patients with Facial Nerve Damage
title_sort severity of emotional maladaptation and ability to recognize emotions in patients with facial nerve damage
url https://psyjournals.ru/en/journals/exppsy/archive/2024_n4/Rakhmanina_Kholmogorova_Zavaliy
work_keys_str_mv AT aarakhmanina severityofemotionalmaladaptationandabilitytorecognizeemotionsinpatientswithfacialnervedamage
AT abkholmogorova severityofemotionalmaladaptationandabilitytorecognizeemotionsinpatientswithfacialnervedamage
AT lbzavaliy severityofemotionalmaladaptationandabilitytorecognizeemotionsinpatientswithfacialnervedamage