Disrupted Fear and Sadness Recognition in Binge Drinking: A Combined Group and Individual Analysis

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Serval ID
serval:BIB_B6CDC0B1905F
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Disrupted Fear and Sadness Recognition in Binge Drinking: A Combined Group and Individual Analysis
Journal
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research
Author(s)
Lannoy Séverine, Benzerouk Farid, Maurage Pierre, Barrière Sarah, Billieux Joël, Naassila Mickaël, Kaladjian Arthur, Gierski Fabien
ISSN
0145-6008
1530-0277
Publication state
Published
Issued date
09/2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
43
Number
9
Pages
1978-1985
Language
english
Abstract
BACKGROUND:Binge drinking is a harmful pattern of alcohol consumption, associated with cognitive and cerebral impairments. Indeed, various cognitive processes have been identified as disrupted in binge drinking, ranging from perceptive to executive functions, but emotional processes have conversely been little investigated. Particularly, it is unclear to what extent binge drinkers (BD) present difficulties to recognize and categorize the emotions expressed by other individuals. Such an exploration would, however, offer a more comprehensive view of the deficits associated with alcohol-related disorders and potentially involved in the maintenance of this harmful habit. METHODS:Fifty-two BD and 42 control participants performed an emotional task assessing the ability to recognize 6 basic emotions (i.e., anger, contempt, disgust, fear, happiness, and sadness). Accuracy score and detection threshold were collected for each emotion. To explore the extent of emotion recognition difficulties, 2 analyses were conducted: (i) classical repeated measures analyses of variance, to compare groups' performance, and (ii) multiple single-case analyses (i.e., Crawford's t-tests), to determine the percentage of BD presenting genuine emotion recognition deficits. Correlations were also performed between alcohol consumption characteristics and emotional recognition scores. RESULTS:BD presented reduced performance for the recognition of fear and sadness. Multiple single cases highlighted that these deficits respectively concerned 21.15 and 15.38% of the binge drinking sample, and the relation between binge drinking and reduced sadness detection was supported by correlational analyses. CONCLUSIONS:These findings show that binge drinking is associated with a disrupted processing of emotional stimuli. By identifying heterogeneity in the impairments presented by BD, the present results also underline the usefulness of a combined group and individual Analysis.
Keywords
Toxicology, Medicine (miscellaneous), Psychiatry and Mental health, Alcohol Use Disorder, Emotion, Addiction
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
10/01/2020 10:30
Last modification date
14/01/2020 18:53
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