AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent studies suggest a link between hypertension and emotional dampening, where individuals with higher blood pressure show reduced emotional responsiveness.
  • A study compared emotion recognition abilities among normotensive, prehypertensive, and hypertensive individuals, finding that normotensives were significantly better at labeling and matching facial emotions.
  • The results indicate that both hypertensives and prehypertensives experience emotional dampening, highlighting the psychological factors contributing to hypertension.

Article Abstract

Psychological factors are known to play an important part in the origin of many medical conditions including hypertension. Recent studies have reported elevated blood pressure (even in the normal range of variation) to be associated with a reduced responsiveness to emotions or 'emotional dampening'. Our aim was to assess emotional dampening in individuals with more extreme blood pressure levels including prehypertensives (N = 58) and hypertensives (N = 60) by comparing their emotion recognition ability with normotensives (N = 57). Participants completed novel facial emotion matching and facial emotion labelling tasks following blood pressure measurement and their accuracy of emotion recognition and average response times were compared. The normotensives demonstrated a significantly higher accuracy of emotion recognition than the prehypertensives and the hypertensives in labelling of facial emotions. This difference generalised to the task where two facial halves (upper & lower) had to be matched on the basis of emotions. In neither the labelling nor matching emotion conditions did the groups differ in their speed of emotion processing. Findings of the present study extend reports of 'emotional dampening' to hypertensives as well as to those at-risk for developing hypertension (i.e. prehypertensives) and have important implications for understanding the psychological component of such medical conditions as hypertension.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08870446.2017.1401624DOI Listing

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