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Face pareidolia in male schizophrenia
PsychologySchizophrenia

Face pareidolia in male schizophrenia

V. Romagnano, A. N. Sokolov, et al.

This groundbreaking study reveals that male schizophrenia patients exhibit a noteworthy deficit in recognizing facial cues, boasting fewer 'face' responses compared to controls. Conducted by Valentina Romagnano, Alexander N. Sokolov, Patrick Steinwand, Andreas J. Fallgatter, and Marina A. Pavlova, the research suggests that altered facial sensitivity, rather than cognitive bias, underpins these differences, shedding light on impaired social signaling in schizophrenia.... show more
Abstract
Faces are valuable signals for efficient social interaction. Yet, social cognition including the sensitivity to a coarse face scheme may be deviant in schizophrenia (SZ). Tuning to faces in non-face images such as shadows, grilled toasts, or ink blots is termed face pareidolia. This phenomenon is poorly investigated in SZ. Here face tuning was assessed in 44 male participants with SZ and person-by-person matched controls by using recently created Face-n-Thing images (photographs of non-face objects to a varying degree resembling a face). The advantage of these images is that single components do not automatically trigger face processing. Participants were administered a set of images with upright and inverted (180° in the image plane) orientation. In a two-alternative forced-choice paradigm, they had to indicate whether an image resembled a face. The findings showed that: (i) With upright orientation, SZ patients exhibited deficits in face tuning: they provided much fewer face responses than controls. (ii) Inversion generally hindered face pareidolia. However, while in neurotypical males, inversion led to a drastic drop in face impression, in SZ, the impact of orientation was reduced. (iii) Finally, in accord with the signal detection theory analysis, the sensitivity index (d-prime) was lower in SZ, whereas no difference occurred in decision criterion. The outcome suggests altered face pareidolia in SZ is caused by lower face sensitivity rather than by alterations in cognitive bias. Comparison of these findings with earlier evidence confirms that tuning to social signals is lower in SZ, and warrants tailored brain imaging research.
Publisher
Schizophrenia
Published On
Dec 14, 2022
Authors
Valentina Romagnano, Alexander N. Sokolov, Patrick Steinwand, Andreas J. Fallgatter, Marina A. Pavlova
Tags
schizophreniaface pareidoliafacial recognitionsocial signalingsignal detection theory
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