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Objective Previous studies reported gender differences for facial emotion recognition in healthy people, with women performing better than men. Few studies that examined gender differences for facial emotion recognition in schizophrenia brought out inconsistent findings. The aim of this study is to investigate gender differences for facial emotion identification and discrimination abilities in patients with schizophrenia. Methods 35 female and 35 male patients with schizophrenia, along with 35 female and 35 male healthy controls were included in the study.
Results Male patients performed significantly worse than female patients on FEIT total, and negative scores. Male controls performed significantly worse than female controls on FEIT total and negative scores. On all tasks, female patients performed comparable with controls. Conclusion Women with schizophrenia outperformed men for facial emotion recognition ability in a pattern that is similar with the healthy controls.
It could be claimed that male patients with schizophrenia need special consideration for emotion perception deficits. Original Article. Psychiatry Investigation ;10 1 Published online: January 25, Abstract Objective Previous studies reported gender differences for facial emotion recognition in healthy people, with women performing better than men. Later onset, less severe negative symptoms, better treatment response and better outcome were reported in female schizophrenia patients compared with male patients.
Facial emotions play a crucial role in social communication and interaction by providing information on individuals' mental state and inclinations. Deficits in the recognition of emotional facial expressions have been widely reported in patients with schizophrenia, 4 - 8 and these deficits have been associated with poor functional outcomes and impaired social functioning. Previous studies reported sex differences for facial emotion recognition in healthy people, with women performing better than men.