Behavioural and neural correlates of emotion recognition as a function of psychopathic personality traits
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Abstract
Psychopathy is associated with well-known characteristics such as a lack of
empathy and impulsive behaviour, but it has also been associated with impaired
recognition of emotional facial expressions. The use of event-related potentials (ERPs) to
examine this phenomenon could shed light on the specific time course and neural
activation associated with emotion recognition processes as they relate to psychopathic
traits. In the current study we examined the PI , N170, and vertex positive potential (VPP)
ERP components and behavioural performance with respect to scores on the Self-Report
Psychopathy (SRP-III) questionnaire. Thirty undergraduates completed two tasks, the
first of which required the recognition and categorization of affective face stimuli under
varying presentation conditions. Happy, angry or fearful faces were presented under with
attention directed to the mouth, nose or eye region and varied stimulus exposure duration
(30, 75, or 150 ms). We found that behavioural performance to be unrelated to
psychopathic personality traits in all conditions, but there was a trend for the Nl70 to
peak later in response to fearful and happy facial expressions for individuals high in
psychopathic traits. However, the amplitude of the VPP was significantly negatively
associated with psychopathic traits, but only in response to stimuli presented under a
nose-level fixation. Finally, psychopathic traits were found to be associated with longer
N170 latencies in response to stimuli presented under the 30 ms exposure duration.
In the second task, participants were required to inhibit processing of irrelevant
affective and scrambled face distractors while categorizing unrelated word stimuli as
living or nonliving. Psychopathic traits were hypothesized to be positively associated
with behavioural performance, as it was proposed that individuals high in psychopathic traits would be less likely to automatically attend to task-irrelevant affective distractors,
facilitating word categorization. Thus, decreased interference would be reflected in
smaller N170 components, indicating less neural activity associated with processing of
distractor faces. We found that overall performance decreased in the presence of angry
and fearful distractor faces as psychopathic traits increased. In addition, the amplitude of
the N170 decreased and the latency increased in response to affective distractor faces for
individuals with higher levels of psychopathic traits.
Although we failed to find the predicted behavioural deficit in emotion
recognition in Task 1 and facilitation effect in Task 2, the findings of increased N170 and
VPP latencies in response to emotional faces are consistent wi th the proposition that
abnormal emotion recognition processes may in fact be inherent to psychopathy as a
continuous personality trait.