Neuropsychologia
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Clinical Trial
Emotion recognition impairment and apathy after subthalamic nucleus stimulation in Parkinson's disease have separate neural substrates.
To test the hypothesis that emotion recognition and apathy share the same functional circuit involving the subthalamic nucleus (STN). ⋯ Our results confirm that the STN is involved in both the apathy and emotion recognition networks. However, the absence of any correlation between apathy and emotion recognition impairment suggests that the worsening of apathy following surgery could not be explained by a lack of facial emotion recognition and that its behavioural and cognitive components should therefore also be taken into consideration.
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Earlier studies reported evidence suggesting distinct category-related auditory representations for environmental sounds such as animal vocalizations and tool sounds in superior and middle temporal regions of the temporal lobe. However, the degree of selectivity of these representations remains to be determined. The present study combined functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) adaptation with a silent acquisition protocol to further investigate category-related auditory processing of environmental sounds. ⋯ While tool sounds still produced fMRI signals significantly different from fixation baseline in the STG, this was not the case for animal vocalizations in pMTG. Consistent with the interpretation of STG as an intermediate auditory processing stage, this region might differentiate auditory stimuli into categories based on variations of physical stimulus properties. However, processing in left pMTG seems to be even more restricted to action-related sounds of man-made objects.
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A well-documented feature of Huntington's disease (HD) is disproportionate impairment in the ability to recognise the emotional expression of disgust. However, this finding has been challenged by studies that report no differential disgust impairment and attribute apparent differences across emotions to task difficulty. The present study sought to shed light on disparities in findings through a comparative study of emotion recognition in HD and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). ⋯ Consistency in performance, despite varying task demands, excluded an explanation in terms of item difficulty, and was in keeping with the notion of distinct neural substrates for processing of negative emotions. Contrary to the notion of disproportionate disgust impairment, the most severe deficits in HD were elicited for anger, a finding that may have relevance for the poor anger control that is the hallmark of HD. The data raise the possibility that linguistic influences and conceptual complexities of the emotion of disgust may contribute to the variable finding of selective disgust impairment in HD.