Appearance-based trust processing in schizophrenia.
Clare A M SutherlandGillian RhodesNikolas S WilliamsEmily ConnaughtonLouise EwingNathan CaruanaRobyn LangdonPublished in: The British journal of clinical psychology (2019)
Findings People with schizophrenia made very similar facial trustworthiness impressions to healthy controls and also used facial appearance to guide trust decisions similarly to controls. However, the patient group were less able to explicitly distinguish between fair and unfair partners based on their behaviour compared with the control group. Moreover, people with schizophrenia failed to use actual partner fairness to guide their financial decisions in the Trust Game, unlike controls, and this impairment was specific to a social task. People with schizophrenia may be particularly reliant on facial appearance when trusting others, as they may struggle to incorporate more valid trustworthiness information in their decision-making, such as actual partner fairness.