Schizophrenia
Limits One's Ability to Perceive Body Language
"If we see a coworker hunched over and don't see his face, we may
approach him cautiously because we think something might be wrong and
perhaps we can help. We don't see the face, but we glean information from
the body language. People with
schizophrenia are not as good at extracting this kind of information to
guide their social interactions."
(May 19, 2006) - Understanding the meaning behind
a person's posture or body movement comes easily to many people and helps
guide how we react to others socially.
But
people with schizophrenia, even those who have mild to moderate symptoms
and take medications, are
not fluent in understanding body language, according to a University of
Iowa-led study that included investigators Nirav Bigelow, Ph.D., Sergio
Paradiso, M.D., Ph.D., and Nancy C. Andreasen M.D., Ph.D. The results appear
in the April 2006 issue of Schizophrenia Research.
Previous studies conducted by Paradiso and Andreasen showed that patients
with schizophrenia have trouble deciphering emotion from human facial
expressions. However, it was not well understood whether this perception
problem extended to other socially relevant clues, said Sergio Paradiso, the
study's corresponding author and assistant professor of psychiatry in the UI
Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine.
"As we interact with people, we make judgments that we're not consciously
aware of," Paradiso said. "If we see a coworker hunched over and don't see
his face, we may approach him cautiously because we think something might be
wrong and perhaps we can help. We don't see the face, but we glean
information from the body language. People with schizophrenia are not as
good at extracting this kind of information to guide their social
interactions."
The study included 14 people without schizophrenia and 20 people with
schizophrenia who were taking
medication and had mild to moderate symptoms.
"Unfortunately, standard treatment for schizophrenia does not appear to
be capable of improving perception that helps in being social with others,"
Paradiso said.
The inability to perceive body language also appears unrelated to a
person's level of intelligence. "Many people with schizophrenia, including
those who are very bright, remain awkward in social situations," Paradiso
added.
The study used innovative techniques, selected by the team and
implemented by Bigelow and Andreasen, to test the study participants'
reactions to human posture and movement. Bigelow, a former UI fellow in
psychiatry, is now a clinical neuropsychologist at the Indianapolis
Community North Hospital, and Andreasen is the Andrew H. Woods Chair of
Psychiatry at the UI.
In one test, participants watched a video of human bodies in motion. The
images were manipulated so that no facial features or body shapes could be
seen. Instead, only points of light, attached to the joints of the people on
the tape, were visible as they moved. Based on the speed and pattern of the
bright dots, individuals without schizophrenia and healthy volunteers were
asked to determine if the motion depicted joy or sadness, for example. The
study found that individuals with schizophrenia could not accurately
decipher these emotions. .
Study participants also viewed still film clips of complex social scenes
in which the actors' faces were erased. The participants then viewed the
same clips with the faces reinstated. People with schizophrenia did not
improve their performances in identifying the overall mood of the people in
the scene.
"The film clip test showed that patients with schizophrenia have problems
with both taking advantage of extra information that is conveyed by the
human face and with deciphering socially relevant stimuli that are not
conveyed by facial expression," Paradiso said.
Whether people with schizophrenia can learn to perceive body posture and
other social clues has not been studied in detail. Paradiso said the
question is an important one to be examined at a neuroscientific level -- to
see whether, with adequate rehabilitation, regions of the brain can take
over and support social perception abilities.
"The idea of other circuits taking over the brain for specific mental
capacities is not new. There's some degree of redundancy in the brain so
that when a specific faculty is affected another part of the brain attempts
to take over. It may occur in people who have had a stroke, usually through
rehabilitation," he said.
Next, UI investigators will examine more closely how medication used to
treat schizophrenia affects social perception of emotionally laden material
and whether different medications have different effects.
Source: University of Iowa Press Release
Last updated: 5/06
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