Misreading emotions as positive could be a sign of brain ageing

Publicly released:
International
Photo by Murtaza Hamid on Unsplash
Photo by Murtaza Hamid on Unsplash

As we get older, we might be more likely to recognise emotions as positive. Previous research has suggested this might be the way we adapt to support mental and emotional wellness, but international researchers say it might actually be a sign of mental decline associated with ageing. The team looked at information from 665 participants in an emotion recognition task and found this bias to recognise emotions as positive seemed to be linked to poorer brain performance in other tasks. The researchers also found structural changes in the brain areas associated with emotional processing and changes in how those areas communicate with another brain region involved in social decisions.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

An early sign of cognitive decline in aging populations
As people age, they are more likely to label others’ emotions as positive. This tendency is associated with observable changes in the brain linked to cognitive decline and neurodegeneration.

As people age, they display a bias in recognizing emotions as positive — to the point of improperly labeling neutral or negative emotions as positive. Some researchers theorize this bias is an adaptive mechanism to support mental and emotional wellness, but new evidence suggests it may be a sign of cognitive decline. In a new study, Noham Wolpe, from Tel Aviv University, and colleagues, from the University of Cambridge, advance understanding on what this positive emotion bias that elders exhibit signifies about their brains’ health.

A large pool of participants (665) viewed faces in an emotion recognition task. Age-related positivity bias correlated with poorer cognitive performance in two assessments, but not necessarily emotional decline as measured by examining nonclinical depressive symptoms. The researchers also observed structural changes in brain areas associated with emotional processing and changes in how these areas communicate to another brain region involved in social decisions. Thus, positivity bias from aging impacts the brain in observable ways that could be leveraged clinically to detect early rising signs of age-related neurodegeneration and cognitive decline.

Says Wolpe of the group’s next steps, “We are exploring how these findings relate to older adults with early cognitive decline, particularly those showing signs of apathy, which is often another early sign of dementia.”

Attachments

Note: Not all attachments are visible to the general public. Research URLs will go live after the embargo ends.

Research Society for Neuroscience, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo lifts.
Journal/
conference:
JNeurosci
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Tel Aviv University, Israel
Funder: Cam- CAN research was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BB/H008217/1). NW was supported by an Israel Science Foundation Personal Research Grant (1603/22). DH was supported by an ISF Mavri fellowship. RNH was supported by the UK Medical Research Council [SUAG/046/G101400].
Media Contact/s
Contact details are only visible to registered journalists.