Alexithymia does not explain facial expression recognition difficulties across the dark triad spectrum.

Q J Exp Psychol (Hove)

School of Psychology, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Science, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.

Published: December 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated whether trait alexithymia could uniquely predict abilities in facial expression discrimination and labeling, beyond the influence of dark triad traits (narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy) in a sample of 236 individuals.
  • Findings revealed that while both autistic traits and dark triad traits were correlated with facial expression recognition abilities, alexithymic traits did not add any unique predictive value.
  • The results suggest that dark triad and autistic traits, along with general cognitive ability, play essential roles in facial expression recognition, while alexithymia does not contribute additional unique variance.

Article Abstract

The dark triad encompasses socially aversive personality traits-narcissism, psychopathy, and Machiavellianism-and has been shown to be associated with expression recognition difficulties. Alexithymia has been shown to be associated with the dark triad, and recent evidence has suggested that co-occurring alexithymia may explain facial expression recognition difficulties found in the autism spectrum. Here, I tested this alexithymia hypothesis for individuals on the . Using an individual difference approach, I assessed whether trait alexithymia was able to predict unique variance in facial expression discrimination ability and facial expression labelling ability above and beyond an individual's level of dark triad traits. Results showed that autistic traits, alexithymic traits, and dark triad traits all correlated with expression recognition ability. However, linear regression models showed that an individual's level of dark triad traits, their level of autistic traits, and a brief measure of general cognitive ability each predicted unique variance in facial expression discrimination and facial expression labelling ability, but an individual's level of alexithymic traits predicted no additional unique variance. Results suggest that dark triad and autistic traits each contribute to expression recognition ability in unique ways alongside general cognitive ability.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/17470218241307763DOI Listing

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