2017
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00405
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Abnormal Visual Scanning of Emotionally Evocative Natural Scenes in Huntington’s Disease

Abstract: Huntington’s disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative movement disorder associated with deficits in the processing of emotional stimuli, including alterations in the self-reported subjective experience of emotion when presented with pictures of emotional scenes. The aim of this study was to determine whether individuals with HD, compared to unaffected controls, display abnormal visual scanning of emotionally evocative natural scenes. Using eye-tracking, we recorded eye-movements of 25 HD participants (advanced pre-… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…Our finding of altered visual scanning of human faces is consistent with oculomotor impairments (e.g., Avanzini et al, 1979; Leigh et al, 1983), abnormal visual scanning behavior during nonsocial cognitive tasks (Blekher et al, 2009; Henderson et al, 2011) and during emotional tasks in HD (Kordsachia et al, 2017b), as well as with neurophysiological research suggesting that facial emotion recognition in HD is associated with altered visual processing (Croft et al, 2014; Dogan et al, 2014; Harrington et al, 2014). Nevertheless, the only previous study in HD examining visual scanning of facial expressions did not find differences between HD and control participants in fixation number or duration for the eye, nose, and mouth regions (van Asselen et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
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“…Our finding of altered visual scanning of human faces is consistent with oculomotor impairments (e.g., Avanzini et al, 1979; Leigh et al, 1983), abnormal visual scanning behavior during nonsocial cognitive tasks (Blekher et al, 2009; Henderson et al, 2011) and during emotional tasks in HD (Kordsachia et al, 2017b), as well as with neurophysiological research suggesting that facial emotion recognition in HD is associated with altered visual processing (Croft et al, 2014; Dogan et al, 2014; Harrington et al, 2014). Nevertheless, the only previous study in HD examining visual scanning of facial expressions did not find differences between HD and control participants in fixation number or duration for the eye, nose, and mouth regions (van Asselen et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 83%
“…Abnormal visual scanning of faces is expected given that the basal ganglia, which are dramatically affected in HD, play a role in eye-movement control (Hikosaka, Takikawa, & Kawagoe, 2000). Additionally, oculomotor impairments (Avanzini, Girotti, Caraceni, & Spreafico, 1979; Leigh, Newman, Folstein, Lasker, & Jensen, 1983), abnormal visual scanning patterns during cognitive tasks (Blekher et al, 2009; Henderson et al, 2011), and abnormal visual scanning of emotionally evocative natural scenes (Kordsachia, Labuschagne, & Stout, 2017b) have been reported in HD. Interestingly, the emotion recognition deficit in HD is not specific to the facial or visual domain, as emotion recognition impairments also affect body language (de Gelder, Van den Stock, Balaguer, & Bachoud- Lévi, 2008) and nonverbal vocalizations (Bora et al, 2016; Sprengelmeyer et al, 2006).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%