AI Article Synopsis

  • Social dysfunction is a common feature of neuropsychiatric disorders like Schizophrenia and Alzheimer's disease, impacting socioaffective neural processing.
  • A study analyzed how social dysfunction correlates with brain system activity in SZ and AD patients through fMRI tasks, revealing patterns related to emotional responses.
  • The research found that severe behavioral social dysfunction linked to hyperactivity and hypoactivity in specific brain regions, highlighting the potential for tailored care based on individual social behavior.

Article Abstract

Social dysfunction represents one of the most common signs of neuropsychiatric disorders, such as Schizophrenia (SZ) and Alzheimer's disease (AD). Perturbed socioaffective neural processing is crucially implicated in SZ/AD and generally linked to social dysfunction. Yet, transdiagnostic properties of social dysfunction and its neurobiological underpinnings remain unknown. As part of the European PRISM project, we examined whether social dysfunction maps onto shifts within socioaffective brain systems across SZ and AD patients. We probed coupling of social dysfunction with socioaffective neural processing, as indexed by an implicit facial emotional processing fMRI task, across SZ (N = 46), AD (N = 40) and two age-matched healthy control (HC) groups (N = 26 HC-younger and N = 27 HC-older). Behavioural (i.e., social withdrawal, interpersonal dysfunction, diminished prosocial or recreational activity) and subjective (i.e., feelings of loneliness) aspects of social dysfunction were assessed using the Social Functioning Scale and De Jong-Gierveld loneliness questionnaire, respectively. Across SZ/AD/HC participants, more severe behavioural social dysfunction related to hyperactivity within fronto-parieto-limbic brain systems in response to sad emotions (P = 0.0078), along with hypoactivity of these brain systems in response to happy emotions (P = 0.0418). Such relationships were not found for subjective experiences of social dysfunction. These effects were independent of diagnosis, and not confounded by clinical and sociodemographic factors. In conclusion, behavioural aspects of social dysfunction across SZ/AD/HC participants are associated with shifts within fronto-parieto-limbic brain systems. These findings pinpoint altered socioaffective neural processing as a putative marker for social dysfunction, and could aid personalized care initiatives grounded in social behaviour.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.euroneuro.2024.05.004DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

social dysfunction
44
brain systems
20
social
14
socioaffective neural
12
neural processing
12
dysfunction
11
shifts socioaffective
8
socioaffective brain
8
schizophrenia alzheimer's
8
alzheimer's disease
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!