Cortex
Volume 47, Issue 1 , Pages 23-34, January 2011

Covert processing of facial expressions by people with Williams syndrome

  • Yonata Levy

      Affiliations

    • Psychology Department, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
    • Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Psychology Department, Hebrew University, Jerusalem 91905, Israel.
  • ,
  • Hadas Pluber

      Affiliations

    • Psychology Department, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
  • ,
  • Shlomo Bentin

      Affiliations

    • Psychology Department, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
    • The Interdisciplinary Center for Neural Computation, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel

Received 23 April 2008; received in revised form 5 September 2008 and 22 July 2009; accepted 24 September 2009. published online 23 October 2009.

Action editor Stefan Schweinberger

Abstract 

Although individuals with Williams Syndrome (WS) are empathic and sociable and perform relatively well on face recognition tasks, they perform poorly on tasks of facial expression recognition. The current study sought to investigate this seeming inconsistency. Participants were tested on a Garner-type matching paradigm in which identities and expressions were manipulated simultaneously as the relevant or irrelevant dimensions. Performance of people with WS on the expression-matching task was poor and relied primarily on facilitation afforded by congruent identities. Performance on the identity matching task came close to the level of performance of matched controls and was significantly facilitated by congruent expressions. We discuss potential accounts for the discrepant processing of expressions in the task-relevant (overt) and task-irrelevant (covert) conditions, expanding on the inherently semantic-conceptual nature of overt expression matching and its dependence on general cognitive level.

Keywords: Facial expressions, Williams syndrome, Covert processing, Cognitive IQ

 

PII: S0010-9452(09)00274-3

doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2009.09.011

Cortex
Volume 47, Issue 1 , Pages 23-34, January 2011