4.6 Article

The other-race effect in face processing among African American and Caucasian individuals with schizophrenia

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
Volume 165, Issue 5, Pages 639-645

Publisher

AMER PSYCHIATRIC PUBLISHING, INC
DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2007.07101604

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Funding

  1. NCRR NIH HHS [MO1RR0040, M01 RR000040] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH61622, R01 MH63480, R01 MH059490, R01 MH65588, R01 MH065588, R37 MH059490, R01 MH065707, R01 MH066004, R01 MH65558, R01 MH065554, R01 MH042191, R01 MH66278, R01 MH066050, R01 MH66181, R37 MH043518, R01 MH066278, R01 MH065562, R01 MH063480, R01 MH42191, R01 MH65578, R01 MH066049, R01 MH66004, R01 MH66050, R01 MH066263, R01 MH065558, R01 MH043518, T32 MH019112, R37 MH042191, R01 MH59490, R01 MH066006, R01 MH066121, T32 MH-019112, R01 MH66263, R01 MH66121, R01 MH-065578, R01 MH065571, R01 MH60722, R01 MH43518, R01 MH066005, R01 MH061622, R01 MH-066121, MH-042191, R01 MH-060722, R01 MH066181, R01 MH66006, R01 MH060722, R01 MH65707, R01 MH065578] Funding Source: Medline

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Objective: Studies of emotion recognition abilities in schizophrenia show greater impairment for non-Caucasians with schizophrenia compared with Caucasians. These studies, however, included only Caucasian faces as stimuli. There is evidence from healthy individuals for a performance disadvantage on face memory and emotion recognition when processing faces from a different ethnicity. The authors sought to measure the other-race effect in schizophrenia, which could account for previous findings and provide information about sensitivity to such social cues in patients. Method: The study included 540 participants from four groups: African Americans with schizophrenia (N=135), Caucasians with schizophrenia (N=135), African American community comparison subjects (N=135), and Caucasian community comparison subjects (N=135). All participants completed face recognition and facial emotion identification tasks that included both Caucasian and African American faces as stimuli. Results: Although comparison participants performed better than individuals with schizophrenia across all tasks, both comparison participants and participants with schizophrenia exhibited a strong and significant other-race effect for face memory and emotion recognition. The magnitude of the other-race effect did not differ between these two groups. Conclusions: These findings reveal an intact other-race effect in patients with schizophrenia and highlight a methodological concern in the measurement of face processing abilities in schizophrenia, namely, that findings of greater impairment in African American patients are spurious when Caucasian faces are used as stimuli. Despite overall impairments in face memory and emotion recognition, the presence of a normative other-race effect in schizophrenia may reflect typical experiences with faces during development.

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