Facial Emotion Recognition in Psychosis and Associations With Polygenic Risk for Schizophrenia: Findings From the Multi-Center EU-GEI Case-Control Study.
Giada TripoliDiego QuattroneLaura FerraroCharlotte Gayer-AndersonCaterina La CasciaDaniele La BarberaCrocettarachele SartorioFabio SeminerioVictoria RodriguezIlaria TarriconeDomenico BerardiStéphane JamainCelso ArangoAndrea TortelliPierre-Michel LlorcaLieuwe de HaanEva VelthorstJulio BobesMiquel BernardoJulio SanjuánJose Luis SantosManuel ArrojoCristina Marta Del-BenPaulo Rossi MenezesEls van der VenPeter B JonesHannah E JongsmaJames Bowes KirkbrideSarah TosatoAntonio LasalviaAlexander L RichardsMichael O'DonovanBart P F RuttenJim van OsCraig MorganPak C ShamMarta Di FortiRobin M MurrayGraham K MurrayPublished in: Schizophrenia bulletin (2022)
Psychosis is associated with impaired recognition of fear and anger, and higher SZ PRS is associated with worse facial anger recognition. Our findings provide evidence that facial emotion recognition of anger might play a role as an intermediate phenotype for psychosis.