Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients

Abstract Objective This study investigates whether there exist differences in lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients suffering from Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) based on the presence of a facial paresis and their degree of facial functioning as measured by the House Brackmann Grading...

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Main Authors: Stephanie S. A. H. Blom, Henk Aarts, Henricus P. M. Kunst, Capi C. Wever, Gün R. Semin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-07-01
Series:Brain and Behavior
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1644
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spelling doaj-d93b7e3bdfb84558a4365e23baed6e9b2020-11-25T02:33:32ZengWileyBrain and Behavior2162-32792020-07-01107n/an/a10.1002/brb3.1644Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patientsStephanie S. A. H. Blom0Henk Aarts1Henricus P. M. Kunst2Capi C. Wever3Gün R. Semin4Department of Psychology Utrecht University Utrecht The NetherlandsDepartment of Psychology Utrecht University Utrecht The NetherlandsDepartment of Otolaryngology Radboud Institute for Health Sciences Radboud University Medical Center Nijmegen The NetherlandsDepartment of Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery Leiden University Medical Center Leiden The NetherlandsDepartment of Psychology Utrecht University Utrecht The NetherlandsAbstract Objective This study investigates whether there exist differences in lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients suffering from Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) based on the presence of a facial paresis and their degree of facial functioning as measured by the House Brackmann Grading scale (HBG). Methods Forty‐four VS patients, half of them with a facial paresis and half of them without a facial paresis, rated how emotive they considered images of faces showing emotion in the left versus right visual field. Stimuli consisted of faces with a neutral half and an emotional (happy or angry) half. The study had a mixed design with emotional expression (happy vs. angry) and emotional half (left vs. right visual field) of the faces as repeated measures, and facial paresis (present vs. absent) and HBG as between subjects’ factors. The visual field bias was the main dependent variable. Results In line with typical findings in the normal population, a left visual field bias showed in the current sample: patients judged emotional expressions shown in the left visual field as more emotive than those shown in the right visual field. No differences in visual field bias showed based on the presence of a facial paresis nor based on patients’ HBG. Conclusion VS patients show a left visual field bias when processing facial emotion. No differences in lateralization showed based on the presence of a facial paresis or on patients’ HBG. Based on this study, facial paresis thus does not affect the lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients with VS.https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1644emotion expressionfacial mimicryfacial paresishemispheric processingVestibular Schwannoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephanie S. A. H. Blom
Henk Aarts
Henricus P. M. Kunst
Capi C. Wever
Gün R. Semin
spellingShingle Stephanie S. A. H. Blom
Henk Aarts
Henricus P. M. Kunst
Capi C. Wever
Gün R. Semin
Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
Brain and Behavior
emotion expression
facial mimicry
facial paresis
hemispheric processing
Vestibular Schwannoma
author_facet Stephanie S. A. H. Blom
Henk Aarts
Henricus P. M. Kunst
Capi C. Wever
Gün R. Semin
author_sort Stephanie S. A. H. Blom
title Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
title_short Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
title_full Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
title_fullStr Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
title_full_unstemmed Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients
title_sort lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in vestibular schwannoma patients
publisher Wiley
series Brain and Behavior
issn 2162-3279
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Objective This study investigates whether there exist differences in lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients suffering from Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) based on the presence of a facial paresis and their degree of facial functioning as measured by the House Brackmann Grading scale (HBG). Methods Forty‐four VS patients, half of them with a facial paresis and half of them without a facial paresis, rated how emotive they considered images of faces showing emotion in the left versus right visual field. Stimuli consisted of faces with a neutral half and an emotional (happy or angry) half. The study had a mixed design with emotional expression (happy vs. angry) and emotional half (left vs. right visual field) of the faces as repeated measures, and facial paresis (present vs. absent) and HBG as between subjects’ factors. The visual field bias was the main dependent variable. Results In line with typical findings in the normal population, a left visual field bias showed in the current sample: patients judged emotional expressions shown in the left visual field as more emotive than those shown in the right visual field. No differences in visual field bias showed based on the presence of a facial paresis nor based on patients’ HBG. Conclusion VS patients show a left visual field bias when processing facial emotion. No differences in lateralization showed based on the presence of a facial paresis or on patients’ HBG. Based on this study, facial paresis thus does not affect the lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients with VS.
topic emotion expression
facial mimicry
facial paresis
hemispheric processing
Vestibular Schwannoma
url https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.1644
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