Emotion-processing deficit in alexithymia |
Author(s):
Journal/Book: Psychophysiology. 1999; 36: 40 West 20Th Street, New York, NY 10011-4211, USA. Cambridge Univ Press. 379-387.
Abstract: College undergraduates were identified as alexithymic or control, based on their scores on the Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS; Taylor, Ryan, & Bagby, 1985). All subjects were presented standardized emotion-eliciting color slides for 6 s while facial muscle, heart rate, and skin conductance activity were recorded. Stimuli were presented a second time while subjects were asked to provide emotion self-reports using a paper-and-pencil version of the Self-Assessment Manikin (SAM; Lang, 1980) and to generate a list of words describing their emotional reaction to each slide. Consistent with the definition of alexithymia as a syndrome characterized, in part, by a deficit in the identification of emotion states, high TAS subjects supplied fewer emotion-related words than did controls to describe their response to the slides. Alexithymics also indicated less variation along the arousal dimension of the SAM, produced fewer specific skin conductance responses and showed less heart rate deceleration to the slides, regardless of category. No valence-related differences between alexithymic and control subjects were noted.
Note: Article Simons RF, Univ Delaware, Dept Psychol, 220 Wolf Hall, Newark,DE 19716 USA
Keyword(s): alexithymia; emotion; arousal; skin conductance; heart rate; PHYSICAL ANHEDONIA; FACIAL EXPRESSIONS; STARTLE REFLEX; COPING STYLES; STRESS; RECOGNITION; RESPONSES; SCALE; PERSONALITY; HYPOTHESIS
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