Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing

Background: A small number of previous studies have provided evidence that cocaine users exhibit impairments in complex social cognition tasks, while the more basic facial emotion recognition is widely unaffected. However, prosody and cross-modal emotion processing has not been systematically invest...

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Main Authors: Lea M Hulka, Katrin H Preller, Matthias eVonmoos, Sarah D Broicher, Boris B Quednow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00098/full
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author Lea M Hulka
Katrin H Preller
Matthias eVonmoos
Sarah D Broicher
Boris B Quednow
author_facet Lea M Hulka
Katrin H Preller
Matthias eVonmoos
Sarah D Broicher
Boris B Quednow
author_sort Lea M Hulka
collection DOAJ
description Background: A small number of previous studies have provided evidence that cocaine users exhibit impairments in complex social cognition tasks, while the more basic facial emotion recognition is widely unaffected. However, prosody and cross-modal emotion processing has not been systematically investigated in cocaine users so far. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to assess complex multisensory emotion processing in cocaine users in comparison to controls and to examine a potential association with drug use patterns.Method: The abbreviated version of the Comprehensive Affect Testing System (CATS-A) was used to measure emotion perception across the three channels of facial affect, prosody, and semantic content in 58 cocaine users and 48 healthy control subjects who were matched for age, sex, verbal intelligence, and years of education.Results: Cocaine users had significantly lower scores than controls in the quotient scales of Emotion Recognition and Prosody Recognition and the subtests Conflicting Prosody/Meaning – Attend to Prosody and Match Emotional Prosody to Emotional Face either requiring to attend to prosody or to integrate cross-modal information. In contrast, no group difference emerged for the Affect Recognition Quotient. Cumulative cocaine doses and duration of cocaine use correlated negatively with emotion processing.Conclusion: Cocaine users show impaired cross-modal integration of different emotion processing channels particularly with regard to prosody, whereas more basic aspects of emotion processing such as facial affect perception are comparable to the performance of healthy controls.
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spelling doaj.art-6b65568204724be99c608c03a7da1ebb2022-12-22T00:59:45ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychiatry1664-06402013-09-01410.3389/fpsyt.2013.0009861422Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processingLea M Hulka0Katrin H Preller1Matthias eVonmoos2Sarah D Broicher3Boris B Quednow4University Hospital of Psychiatry ZurichUniversity Hospital of Psychiatry ZurichUniversity Hospital of Psychiatry ZurichUniversity Hospital ZurichUniversity Hospital of Psychiatry ZurichBackground: A small number of previous studies have provided evidence that cocaine users exhibit impairments in complex social cognition tasks, while the more basic facial emotion recognition is widely unaffected. However, prosody and cross-modal emotion processing has not been systematically investigated in cocaine users so far. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to assess complex multisensory emotion processing in cocaine users in comparison to controls and to examine a potential association with drug use patterns.Method: The abbreviated version of the Comprehensive Affect Testing System (CATS-A) was used to measure emotion perception across the three channels of facial affect, prosody, and semantic content in 58 cocaine users and 48 healthy control subjects who were matched for age, sex, verbal intelligence, and years of education.Results: Cocaine users had significantly lower scores than controls in the quotient scales of Emotion Recognition and Prosody Recognition and the subtests Conflicting Prosody/Meaning – Attend to Prosody and Match Emotional Prosody to Emotional Face either requiring to attend to prosody or to integrate cross-modal information. In contrast, no group difference emerged for the Affect Recognition Quotient. Cumulative cocaine doses and duration of cocaine use correlated negatively with emotion processing.Conclusion: Cocaine users show impaired cross-modal integration of different emotion processing channels particularly with regard to prosody, whereas more basic aspects of emotion processing such as facial affect perception are comparable to the performance of healthy controls.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00098/fullCocaineAddictionEmotion Perceptionsocial cognitionemotion recognitionDrug dependence
spellingShingle Lea M Hulka
Katrin H Preller
Matthias eVonmoos
Sarah D Broicher
Boris B Quednow
Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Cocaine
Addiction
Emotion Perception
social cognition
emotion recognition
Drug dependence
title Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
title_full Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
title_fullStr Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
title_full_unstemmed Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
title_short Cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross-modal emotion processing
title_sort cocaine users manifest impaired prosodic and cross modal emotion processing
topic Cocaine
Addiction
Emotion Perception
social cognition
emotion recognition
Drug dependence
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00098/full
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AT matthiasevonmoos cocaineusersmanifestimpairedprosodicandcrossmodalemotionprocessing
AT sarahdbroicher cocaineusersmanifestimpairedprosodicandcrossmodalemotionprocessing
AT borisbquednow cocaineusersmanifestimpairedprosodicandcrossmodalemotionprocessing