Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8275620 | Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2015 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
At all levels of intensity, elderly individuals with MCI were significantly worse at identifying each EFE than healthy subjects. Some emotions were easier to identify than others, with happiness proving to be the easiest to identify and disgust the hardest, and intensity influenced the identification of the EFEs (the stronger the intensity, the greater the number of correct identifications). Overall, elderly individuals with MCI had a poorer capacity to process EFEs, suggesting that cognitive ability modulates the processing of emotions, where features of such stimuli also seem to play a prominent role (e.g., valence and intensity). Thus, the neurological substrates involved in emotional processing appear to be affected by MCI.
Keywords
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Ageing
Authors
Carmen M. Sarabia-Cobo, Beatriz GarcÃa-RodrÃguez, Mª. José Navas, Heiner Ellgring,