4.4 Article

Visual scanning during emotion recognition in long-term recovered anorexia nervosa: An eye-tracking study

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EATING DISORDERS
Volume 52, Issue 6, Pages 691-700

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eat.23066

Keywords

anorexia nervosa; autism spectrum disorder; emotion recognition; eye tracking; facial expression

Funding

  1. AnnMari and Per Ahlqvist Foundation
  2. StenAOlsson Foundation for research onmental disabilities
  3. Swedish government
  4. county councils
  5. Iris Jonzen-Sandbloms och Greta Jonzens Foundation
  6. Jane and Dan Olsson Foundations [2016-55]
  7. Petter Silfverskiold's Memorial Foundation [2016-007]
  8. Queen Silvia's Jubilee Fund [2016]
  9. Stiftelsen Samariten [2016-0150]
  10. Stiftelserna Wilhelm och Martina Lundgrens [2017-1555, vet2-73/2014]
  11. Vetenskapsradet [521-2012-1754]

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ObjectiveTo examine Facial Emotion Recognition (FER) and visual scanning behavior (eye-tracking) during FER in women long-term recovered from teenage-onset anorexia nervosa (recAN) with and without autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and age-matched comparison women (COMP), using a sensitive design with facial emotion expressions at varying intensities in order to approximate real social contexts. MethodFifty-seven 38-47-year-old women (26 recAN of whom six with ASD, 31 COMP) participated in the study. They completed a non-verbal FER task, consisting of matching basic emotions at different levels of expression intensity with full emotional expressions. Accuracy, response time and visual scanning behavior were measured. ResultsThere were no differences between recAN-ASD and COMP in FER accuracy and visual scanning behavior during FER, including eye viewing and hyperscanning. In an exploratory analysis, recAN+ASD were more accurate than recAN-ASD in identifying expressions at low intensity, but not at medium or high expression intensity. Accuracy was not associated with the extent of attention to the eye region. DiscussionOur data indicate that women long-term recovered from adolescent-onset AN do not have deficits in basic FER ability and visual scanning behavior during FER. However, the presence of comorbid ASD might affect face processing in recovered AN. Future studies investigating basic FER in acute and recovered AN and other conditions need to ensure that the stimuli used are sensitive enough to detect potential deficits.

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