1998
DOI: 10.1177/01454455980222002
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Recognition of Facial Expressions of Emotion by Children with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

Abstract: Fifty children and adolescents were tested for their ability to recognize the 6 basic facial expressions of emotion depicted in Ekman and Friesen's normed photographs. Subjects were presented with sets of 6 photographs of faces, each portraying a different basic emotion, and stories portraying those emotions were read to them. After each story, the subject was asked to point to the photograph in the set that depicted the emotion described. Overall, the children correctly identified the emotions on 74% of the p… Show more

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Cited by 136 publications
(141 citation statements)
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“…This difficulty may be related to the complex dynamics of self-perception of anger and distorted empathy in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder [27,28]. In another study [29], children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder tended to reciprocately mistake anger for disgust. This finding contrasts with the general tendency displayed by children with a history of abuse [30] or with conduct disorder [15] to misinterpret emotions as anger.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This difficulty may be related to the complex dynamics of self-perception of anger and distorted empathy in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder [27,28]. In another study [29], children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder tended to reciprocately mistake anger for disgust. This finding contrasts with the general tendency displayed by children with a history of abuse [30] or with conduct disorder [15] to misinterpret emotions as anger.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In this study, an emotional facial expressions decoding task previously developed in adults, but increasingly used in pediatric neuropsychological studies [11][12][13], was utilized. Children with predominantly hyperactive-impulsive attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder made significantly more errors when labeling emotional facial expressions than control children.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…videogames, mapping task) (Lawrence, Houghton, Tannock, Douglas, Durkin & Whiting, 2002). Additionally, youth with ADHD have difficulty identifying and processing negative emotions (Norvilitis, Casey, Brooklier, & Bonello, 2000;Singh et al, 1998), which may interfere with their ability to persist in goal-directed activity as well.…”
Section: Er and Adhdmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the ability to directly express or understand facial expressions of emotion has yet to be studied among adolescent LD populations, children and adolescents with other exceptionalities, such as those with attention deficit hyperactivity disorders (Singh, et al, 1998), emotional and behavioral disorders (Ellis, et al, 1997), as weIl as children with mental retardation (Mc1pine, Singh, Kendall, & Ellis, 1992) have been shown to be less accurate on tasks that assess general understanding of facial expressions of emotion.…”
Section: Emotion and Learning Disabilities 22mentioning
confidence: 99%