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{{short description|Condition of reduced emotional reactivity in an individual}}
{{Refimprove|date=June 2009}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2024}}


'''Reduced affect display''', sometimes referred to as '''emotional blunting''' or '''emotional numbing''', is a condition of reduced ]al reactivity in an individual. It manifests as a failure to ] either verbally or nonverbally, especially when talking about issues that would normally be expected to engage emotions. In this condition, expressive gestures are rare and there is little animation in ] or vocal inflection.<ref name="SteinWilkinson2007">{{cite book|first1=Peter F.|last1=Liddle|chapter=Schizophrenia: the clinical picture|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6PGzHFuS1xkC&pg=PA167|pages=167–86|editor1-first=George|editor1-last=Stein|editor2-first=Greg|editor2-last=Wilkinson|year=2007|title=Seminars in General Adult Psychiatry|location=London|publisher=Royal College of Psychiatrists|isbn=978-1-904671-44-2}}</ref> Additionally, reduced affect can be symptomatic of ], ], ], ], ],<ref>{{cite journal|last=Ackner|first=B.|year=1954|title=Depersonalisation: I. Aetiology and phenomenology|journal=Journal of Mental Science|volume=100|issue=421|pages=838–853|doi=10.1192/bjp.100.421.838|pmid=13222014}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Saperstein|first=J.L.|year=1949|title=Phenomena of depersonalization|journal=The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease|volume=110|issue=3|pages=236–251|doi=10.1097/00005053-194911030-00005|pmid=18147948}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sierra|first1=M.|last2=Berrios|first2=G.E.|year=2001|title=The Phenomenological Stability of Depersonalization: Comparing the Old with the New|journal=The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease|volume=189|issue=9|pages=629–636|doi=10.1097/00005053-200109000-00010|pmid=11580008|s2cid=22920376}}</ref> ] or ].<ref name = Sue>{{cite book|first1=David|last1=Sue|first2=Diane M.|last2=Sue|chapter=Mental Status Exam|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uzPjJyai0s4C&pg=PA64|pages=64–6|year=2012|title=Foundations of Counseling and Psychotherapy: Evidence-Based Practices for a Diverse Society|location=Hoboken|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|isbn=978-1-118-54210-1}}</ref> It may also be a side effect of certain medications (e.g., antipsychotics<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.inkling.com/read/lippincotts-pharmacology-harvey-champe-5th/chapter-13/iii--antipsychotic-drugs|title=Inkling}}</ref> and ]<ref>{{cite journal|title=Emotional side-effects of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors: qualitative study|first1=Jonathan|last1=Price|first2=Victoria|last2=Cole|first3=Guy M.|last3=Goodwin|journal=The British Journal of Psychiatry|date=Aug 2009|issue=3|volume=195|pages=211–217|doi=10.1192/bjp.bp.108.051110|pmid=19721109|doi-access=free}}</ref>).
'''Blunted affect''' is the scientific term describing a lack of ]al reactivity on the part of an individual.


However, reduced affect should be distinguished from ] and ], which explicitly refer to a lack of emotional sensation.
Victims of ] are often said to display blunted ]. Veterans of intense combat have been described as having the ] (or thousand-yard gaze). Some of these veterans suffer from a disorder once referred to as ] and may experience a number of symptoms, including recurring ]s, ], and avoidance of situations that may cause distress. Others have developed less emotional reactivity as an arguably natural reaction to stress. Those displaying on this end of the spectrum may self-report ] but no psychological distress per se.


==Types==
Blunted affect is very similar to ]. Anhedonia is the decrease or cessation of all feelings of pleasure (which thus affects enjoyment, happiness, fun, interest, and satisfaction). In the case of anhedonia, emotions relating to pleasure will not be expressed as much or at all because they are literally not experienced or are decreased. A person with anhedonia may be unable to laugh or smile, for example. Conversation will not be pleasurably stimulating for a person with extreme anhedonia, and thus that person may not be as responsive to conversation or its emotional subject matter. Both blunted affect and anhedonia are considered negative symptoms of ], meaning that they are indicative of a lack of something. Other negative symptoms of schizophrenia include: ], lack of concentration, social withdrawal (sometimes called social anhedonia), etc.
===Constricted affect===
A restricted or constricted affect is a reduction in an individual's expressive range and the intensity of emotional responses.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3gA4ncoe3gYC&pg=PA110|title=Basic Concepts of Psychiatric-mental Health Nursing|last=Shives|first=Louise Rebraca|date=1 January 2008|publisher=Lippincott Williams & Wilkins|isbn=9780781797078|pages=110|language=en}}</ref>


===Blunted and flat affect===
The precise boundary between the generally positive personality trait "serious" and the generally pathological "blunted affect" is impossible to describe precisely because it is ] specific and relies on ] values. For example, the ]ese are often described as "unemotional" (even to the point of "blunted in affect") by Americans, and so the same individual may be considered to display a blunted affect in one culture and be merely "serious" or "unemotional" in another. See ].
Blunted affect is a lack of affect more severe than restricted or constricted affect, but less severe than flat or flattened affect. "The difference between flat and blunted affect is in degree. A person with flat affect has no or nearly no emotional expression. They may not react at all to circumstances that usually evoke strong emotions in others. A person with blunted affect, on the other hand, has a significantly reduced intensity in emotional expression".<ref>A. Tasman/W. K. Mohn, ''Fundamentals of Psychiatry'' (2011) Section 25.2.3</ref>


===Shallow affect===
One final consideration worth noting is that adults generally display more controlled affect than children. This suggests blunting one's affect may be a normal part of ].
Shallow affect has an equivalent meaning to blunted affect. In the ], Factor 1 identifies shallow affect as a common attribute of ].<ref name=factorstructure>{{cite journal|author=Harpur, T. J., Hare, R. D., & Hakstian, A. R.|title=Two-factor conceptualization of psychopathy: Construct validity and assessment implications|journal=Psychological Assessment|volume=1|issue=1|pages=6–17|year=1989|doi=10.1037/1040-3590.1.1.6}}</ref>


==Brain structures ==
== Affective flattening ==
Individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show different regional brain activity in fMRI scans when presented with emotional stimuli compared to individuals with schizophrenia without blunted affect. For instance, individuals with schizophrenia without blunted affect show activation in the following brain areas when shown emotionally negative pictures: midbrain, pons, anterior cingulate cortex, insula, ventrolateral orbitofrontal cortex, anterior temporal pole, amygdala, medial prefrontal cortex and extrastriate visual cortex. Whereas, individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show activation in the following brain regions when shown emotionally negative pictures: midbrain, pons, anterior temporal pole and extrastriate visual cortex.<ref name="fMRI">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.pscychresns.2005.06.003|title=Brain activity during emotionally negative pictures in schizophrenia with and without flat affect: An fMRI study|year=2005|last1=Fahim|first1=Cherine|last2=Stip|first2=Emmanuel|last3=Mancini-Marïe|first3=Adham|last4=Mensour|first4=Boualem|last5=Boulay|first5=Luc J.|last6=Leroux|first6=Jean-Maxime|last7=Beaudoin|first7=Gilles|last8=Bourgouin|first8=Pierre|last9=Beauregard|first9=Mario|journal=Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging|volume=140|pages=1–15|pmid=16143498|issue=1|s2cid=23542860}}</ref>
'''Affective flattening''' is a general category which includes diminishment of, or absence of, emotional expressiveness. It is sometimes inappropriately equated with blunted or restricted affect. "Blunted" is affect that is present but only with minimal degrees of emotions evident. "Restriction" is a holding back as in ]. "Restricted" is not as severe as in flattened or blunted affect.


===Limbic structures===
] is an affect type that represents mild reduction in the range and intensity of emotional expression. If the client is consistently euphoric and all intensity is congruent but is unaffected by content, this would be still considered constricted to a euphoric affect.
Individuals with schizophrenia with flat affect show decreased activation in the ] when viewing emotional stimuli. In individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect neural processes begin in the occipitotemporal region of the brain and go through the ventral visual pathway and the limbic structures until they reach the inferior frontal areas.<ref name="fMRI"/> Damage to the amygdala of adult rhesus macaques early in life can permanently alter affective processing. Lesioning the amygdala causes blunted affect responses to both positive and negative stimuli. This effect is irreversible in the rhesus macaques; neonatal damage produces the same effect as damage that occurs later in life. The macaques' brain cannot compensate for early amygdala damage, even though significant neuronal growth may occur.<ref name="monkey">{{cite journal|doi=10.1037/a0025757|title=Neonatal amygdala lesions result in globally blunted affect in adult rhesus macaques|year=2011|last1=Bliss-Moreau|first1=Eliza|last2=Bauman|first2=Melissa D.|last3=Amaral|first3=David G.|journal=Behavioral Neuroscience|volume=125|issue=6|pages=848–58|pmid=21988521|pmc=3313682}}</ref> There is some evidence that blunted affect symptoms in schizophrenia patients are not a result of just amygdala responsiveness, but a result of the amygdala not being integrated with other areas of the brain associated with emotional processing, particularly in amygdala-prefrontal cortex coupling.<ref name=source5>{{cite journal|doi=10.1093/schbul/sbq168|title=Emotion Effects on Attention, Amygdala Activation, and Functional Connectivity in Schizophrenia|year=2011|last1=Anticevic|first1=A.|last2=Repovs|first2=G.|last3=Barch|first3=D. M.|journal=Schizophrenia Bulletin|volume=38|issue=5|pages=967–80|pmid=21415225|pmc=3446234}}</ref> Damage in the limbic region prevents the amygdala from correctly interpreting emotional stimuli in individuals with schizophrenia by compromising the link between the amygdala and other brain regions associated with emotion.<ref name="fMRI"/>


===Brainstem===
] refers to the pathological expression of laughter, crying, or smiling. It is also known as "Pseudobulbar Affect", "Emotional Lability", "Pathological Laughter and Crying", or, historically, "Emotional Incontinence". An individual may find themselves laughing uncontrollably at something that is only moderately funny, being unable to stop themselves for several minutes.
Parts of the ] are responsible for passive emotional coping strategies characterized by disengagement or withdrawal from the external environment (], ], hyporeactivity), similar to what is seen in blunted affect. Individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show activation of the brainstem during fMRI scans, particularly the right medulla and the left pons, when shown "sad" film excerpts.<ref name="drug">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.pnpbp.2004.08.015|title=Restoration of frontal activation during a treatment with quetiapine: An fMRI study of blunted affect in schizophrenia|year=2005|last1=Stip|first1=Emmanuel|last2=Fahim|first2=Cherine|last3=Mancini-Marïe|first3=Adham|last4=Bentaleb|first4=Lahcen Ait|last5=Mensour|first5=Boualem|last6=Mendrek|first6=Adrianna|last7=Beauregard|first7=Mario|journal=Progress in Neuro-Psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry|volume=29|pages=21–6|pmid=15610941|issue=1|s2cid=26614932}}</ref> The bilateral midbrain is also activated in individuals with schizophrenia diagnosed with blunted affect. Activation of the midbrain is thought to be related to autonomic responses associated with the perceptual processing of emotional stimuli. This region usually becomes activated in diverse emotional states. When the connectivity between the midbrain and the medial prefrontal cortex is compromised in individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect an absence of emotional reaction to external stimuli results.<ref name="fMRI"/>


===Prefrontal cortex===
Qualities describing the affective response include:
The prefrontal cortex, similarly to the limbic system, plays a role in the induction of an emotion and the regulation of emotions in healthy individuals.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Glotzbach|first1=Evelyn|last2=Mühlberger|first2=Andreas|last3=Gschwendtner|first3=Kathrin|last4=Fallgatter|first4=Andreas J.|last5=Pauli|first5=Paul|last6=Herrmann|first6=Martin J.|date=11 May 2011|title=Prefrontal Brain Activation During Emotional Processing: A Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy Study (fNIRS)|journal=The Open Neuroimaging Journal|url=https://openneuroimagingjournal.com/VOLUME/5/PAGE/33/ABSTRACT/|language=en|volume=5|issue=1|pages=33–39|doi=10.2174/1874440001105010033|pmc=3109593|pmid=21673974}}</ref> Individuals with schizophrenia show no changes in activation of the ] (PFC) when observing external sad stimuli, whereas healthy controls<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Keedwell|first1=Paul A.|last2=Andrew|first2=Chris|last3=Williams|first3=Steven C.R.|last4=Brammer|first4=Mick J.|last5=Phillips|first5=Mary L.|date=September 2005|title=A Double Dissociation of Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortical Responses to Sad and Happy Stimuli in Depressed and Healthy Individuals|url=https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0006322305004968|journal=Biological Psychiatry|volume=58|issue=6|pages=495–503|doi=10.1016/j.biopsych.2005.04.035|pmid=15993859|issn=0006-3223}}</ref> and patients with schizophrenia who were treated with ] for blunted affect show activation of the medial PFC on ]. Individuals with schizophrenia who were reconditioned with quetiapine showed activation in other areas of the PFC as well, including the right medial prefrontal gyrus and the right and left orbitofrontal gyrus.<ref name="drug" /> This lack of PFC activity in people with schizophrenia with blunted affect has been postulated to be related to the impaired emotional processing observed in such individuals.
*concordance (expressed emotion seems to fit what patient is saying, doing) appropriateness, responsiveness (expressed emotion sensibly follows from the precipitating stimuli)
*full range/stable (normal variation of emotions during exam)
*restricted, constricted range (limited variability of emotion during exam)
*labile (type or intensity shifts suddenly, rapidly)
*blunted (few emotions expressed, low intensity)
*flat (affect is even less intense than blunted; patient may appear inanimate)
*exaggerated intensity


===Anterior cingulate cortex===
== Affect and low-functioning schizophrenia ==
A positive correlation has been found between activation of the ] and the reported magnitude of sad feelings evoked by viewing sad film excerpts. The rostral subdivision of this region is possibly involved in detecting emotional signals. This region is different in individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect.<ref name="fMRI"/>
Hoschel (2001) <ref>{{cite journal |author=Höschel K, Irle E |title=Emotional priming of facial affect identification in schizophrenia |journal=Schizophr Bull |volume=27 |issue=2 |pages=317–27 |year=2001 |pmid=11354598 |doi= |url=}}</ref>describes the responses of ] because "emotional information might be related to low social/emotional functioning of the individual with schizophrenia." Referring to clients who are considered "low functioning" (schizophrenics), manifestations of the internal stressors become apparent through displacement activities. ] patients provide clues via assessment presentation which may be indicative of ]<ref>{{cite journal |author=Troisi A, Belsanti S, Bucci AR, Mosco C, Sinti F, Verucci M |title=Affect regulation in alexithymia: an ethological study of displacement behavior during psychiatric interviews |journal=J. Nerv. Ment. Dis. |volume=188 |issue=1 |pages=13–8 |year=2000 |month=January |pmid=10665455 |doi= 10.1097/00005053-200001000-00003|url=}}</ref>.


==Diagnoses==
The displacement and lack of ] responses may be enough for descriptive clinical documentation, but more is usually required. It communicates in ways that are beyond the 'normal' interpretive mechanics. Our description of the emotional component especially with alexithymia makes the therapist more like a detective. One must possess the tools of description and be fluent with its appropriate application.

===Schizophrenia===
Flat and blunted affect is a defining characteristic in the presentation of schizophrenia. To reiterate, these individuals have a decrease in observed vocal and facial expressions as well as the use of gestures.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Marder|first1=Stephen R.|last2=Galderisi|first2=Silvana|date=February 2017|title=The current conceptualization of negative symptoms in schizophrenia|journal=World Psychiatry|language=en|volume=16|issue=1|pages=14–24|doi=10.1002/wps.20385|pmc=5269507|pmid=28127915}}</ref> One study of flat affect in schizophrenia found that "flat affect was more common in men and was associated with worse current quality of life" as well as having "an adverse effect on course of illness".<ref name="bare_url">{{cite journal|doi=10.1093/schbul/sbj041|title=Flat Affect in Schizophrenia: Relation to Emotion Processing and Neurocognitive Measures|year=2006|last1=Gur|first1=R. E|last2=Kohler|first2=C. G|last3=Ragland|first3=J D.|last4=Siegel|first4=S. J|last5=Lesko|first5=K.|last6=Bilker|first6=W. B|last7=Gur|first7=R. C|journal=Schizophrenia Bulletin|volume=32|issue=2|pages=279–87|pmid=16452608|pmc=2632232}}</ref>

The study also reported a "dissociation between reported experience of emotion and its display"<ref name="bare_url" /> – supporting the suggestion made elsewhere that "blunted affect, including flattened facial expressiveness and lack of vocal inflection ... often disguises an individual's true feelings."<ref>{{cite book|first1=D. K.|last1=Snyder|first2=M. A.|last2=Whisman|title=Treating Difficult Couples|year=2003|page=154}}</ref> Thus, feelings may merely be unexpressed, rather than lacking. On the other hand, "a lack of emotions which is due not to mere ] but to a real loss of contact with the objective world gives the observer a specific impression of 'queerness' ... the remainders of emotions or the substitutes for emotions usually refer to rage and ]".<ref>{{cite book|first=Otto|last=Fenichel|title=The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis|location=London|year=1946|pages=445–6}}</ref> In the most extreme cases, there is a complete "] from affective states".<ref>{{cite book|first=Neville|last=Symington|author-link=Neville Symington|title=Narcissism: A New Theory|location=London|year=2003|page=122}}</ref> To further support this idea, a study examining emotion dysregulation found that individuals with schizophrenia could not exaggerate their emotional expression as healthy controls could. Participants were asked to express whatever emotions they had during a clip of a film, and the participants with schizophrenia showed deficits in the behavioral expression of their emotions.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Henry|first1=Julie D.|last2=Green|first2=Melissa J.|last3=de Lucia|first3=Amber|last4=Restuccia|first4=Corinne|last5=McDonald|first5=Skye|last6=O'Donnell|first6=Maryanne|date=1 September 2007|title=Emotion dysregulation in schizophrenia: Reduced amplification of emotional expression is associated with emotional blunting|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0920996407002563|journal=Schizophrenia Research|language=en|volume=95|issue=1|pages=197–204|doi=10.1016/j.schres.2007.06.002|pmid=17630254|s2cid=44415559|issn=0920-9964}}</ref>

There is still some debate regarding the source of flat affect in schizophrenia. However, some literature indicates abnormalities in the dorsal executive and ventral affective systems; it is argued that dorsal hypoactivation and ventral hyperactivation may be the source of flat affect.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Lee|first1=Jung Suk|last2=Chun|first2=Ji Won|last3=Yoon|first3=Sang Young|last4=Park|first4=Hae-Jeong|last5=Kim|first5=Jae-Jin|date=1 January 2014|title=Involvement of the mirror neuron system in blunted affect in schizophrenia|url=https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0920996413005938|journal=Schizophrenia Research|language=en|volume=152|issue=1|pages=268–274|doi=10.1016/j.schres.2013.10.043|pmid=24268934|s2cid=34377252|issn=0920-9964}}</ref> Further, the authors found deficits in the mirror neuron system may also contribute to flat affect in that the deficits may cause disruptions in the control of facial expression.

Another study found that when speaking, individuals with schizophrenia with flat affect demonstrate less inflection than normal controls and appear to be less fluent. Normal subjects appear to express themselves using more complex syntax, whereas flat affect subjects speak with fewer words, and fewer words per sentence. Flat affect individuals' use of context-appropriate words in both sad and happy narratives are similar to that of controls. It is very likely that flat affect is a result of deficits in motor expression as opposed to emotional processing. The moods of display are compromised, but subjective, autonomic, and contextual aspects of emotion are left intact.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/S0165-1781(00)00231-6|title=Prosody and lexical accuracy in flat affect schizophrenia|year=2000|last1=Alpert|first1=Murray|last2=Rosenberg|first2=Stanley D.|last3=Pouget|first3=Enrique R.|last4=Shaw|first4=Richard J.|journal=Psychiatry Research|volume=97|issue=2–3|pages=107–18|pmid=11166083|s2cid=22446103}}</ref>

===Post-traumatic stress disorder===
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was previously known to cause negative feelings, such as ], re-experiencing and ]. However, recently, psychologists have started to focus their attention on the blunted affects and also the decrease in feeling and expressing positive emotions in PTSD patients.<ref name="Kashdan2007">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.paid.2007.01.013|title=Anhedonia, emotional numbing, and symptom overreporting in male veterans with PTSD|year=2007|last1=Kashdan|first1=Todd B.|last2=Elhai|first2=Jon D.|last3=Christopher Frueh|first3=B.|journal=Personality and Individual Differences|volume=43|issue=4|pages=725–735|pmid=18769508|pmc=2084052}}</ref> Blunted affect, or emotional numbness, is considered one of the consequences of PTSD because it causes a diminished interest in activities that produce pleasure (]) and produces feelings of detachment from others, restricted emotional expression and a reduced tendency to express emotions behaviorally. Blunted affect is often seen in veterans as a consequence of the psychological stressful experiences that caused PTSD.<ref name="Kashdan2007" /> Blunted affect is a response to PTSD, it is considered one of the central symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorders and it is often seen in veterans who served in combat zones.<ref name="Amdur">{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/S0887-6185(99)00035-3|title=Emotional Processing in Combat-Related Posttraumatic Stress Disorder|year=2000|last1=Amdur|first1=Richard L.|last2=Larsen|first2=Randy|last3=Liberzon|first3=Israel|journal=Journal of Anxiety Disorders|volume=14|issue=3|pages=219–38|pmid=10868981|s2cid=5824208}}</ref> In PTSD, blunted affect can be considered a psychological response to PTSD as a way to combat overwhelming ] that the patients feel.<ref name="Comorbid">{{cite journal|year=2005|title=Comorbid Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Schizophrenia-PTSD is particularly difficult to diagnose with schizophrenia, and the issues surrounding treatment of this comorbidity are addressed in|journal=Psychiatric Annals|volume=35|issue=1|issn=1938-2456|oclc=27724748|last1=Muenzenmaler|first1=Kristina|first2=Dorothy M.|last2=Castille|first3=Anne-Marie|last3=Shelley|first4=Andrea|last4=Jamison|first5=Joseph|last5=Battaglia|first6=Lewis A.|last6=Opler|first7=Mary Jane|last7=Alexander|pages=50–6}}</ref> In blunted affect, there are abnormalities in circuits that also include the prefrontal cortex.<ref name="Panksepp">{{cite book|editor1-first=Jaak|editor1-last=Panksepp|title=Textbook of Biological Psychiatry|year=2004|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=New Jersey|isbn=978-0-471-43478-8}}{{page needed|date=July 2013}}</ref><ref name="Shin">{{cite journal|doi=10.1196/annals.1364.007|title=Amygdala, Medial Prefrontal Cortex, and Hippocampal Function in PTSD|year=2006|last1=Shin|first1=L. M.|journal=Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences|volume=1071|issue=1|pages=67–79|pmid=16891563|last2=Rauch|first2=SL|last3=Pitman|first3=RK|citeseerx=10.1.1.523.5686|bibcode=2006NYASA1071...67S|s2cid=14972288}}</ref>

===Assessment===
In making assessments of mood and affect the clinician is cautioned that "it is important to keep in mind that demonstrative expression can be influenced by cultural differences, medication, or situational factors";<ref name = Sue/> while the layperson is warned to beware of applying the criterion lightly to "friends, otherwise is likely to make false judgments, in view of the prevalence of ] and ] personalities in our 'normal' population, and our tendency to psychological ]".<ref name= Bernep207>{{cite book|first=Eric|last=Berne|title=A Layman's Guide to Psychiatry and Pscyhoanalysis|publisher=Penguin|year=1976|page=207}}</ref>

] in particular stressed that "such 'clinical' categories as schizoid, ], 'impoverished' affect ... all presuppose that there are reliable, valid impersonal criteria for making attributions about the other person's relation to actions. There are no such reliable or valid criteria".<ref>{{cite book|first=R. D.|last=Laing|title=Self and Others|publisher=Penguin|year=1969|page=128}}</ref>

===Differential diagnosis===
Blunted affect is very similar to ], which is the decrease or cessation of all feelings of pleasure (which thus affects enjoyment, happiness, fun, interest, and satisfaction). In the case of anhedonia, emotions relating to pleasure will not be expressed as much or at all because they are literally not experienced or are decreased. Both blunted affect and anhedonia are considered negative symptoms of ], meaning that they are indicative of a lack of something. There are some other negative symptoms of schizophrenia which include ], ] and ] behaviour.

Closely related is ] – a condition describing people who "lack words for their feelings. They seem to lack feelings altogether, although this may actually be because of their inability to ''express'' emotion rather than from an absence of emotion altogether".<ref>Goleman, p. 50{{verify source|needs more bibliographic info|date=July 2013}}</ref> Alexithymic patients however can provide clues via assessment presentation which may be indicative of ].<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1097/00005053-200001000-00003|title=Affect Regulation in Alexithymia: An Ethological Study of Displacement Behavior during Psychiatric Interviews|year=2000|last1=Troisi|first1=Alfonso|last2=Belsanti|first2=Sergio|last3=Bucci|first3=Anna Rosaria|last4=Mosco|first4=Cristina|last5=Sinti|first5=Fabiola|last6=Verucci|first6=Monica|journal=The Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease|volume=188|pages=13–8|pmid=10665455|issue=1}}</ref>

"If the ] is severed from the rest of the brain, the result is a striking inability to gauge the emotional significance of events; this condition is sometimes called 'affective blindness{{'"}}.<ref>Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence, p. 15</ref> In some cases, blunted affect can fade, but there is no conclusive evidence of why this can occur.


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|Psychology}}
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
*]
* ]


==References== ==References==
{{reflist|2}} {{reflist}}


{{Mood disorders}}
==External links==
{{Psychopathy}}
*


] ]
]

]
]
]

Latest revision as of 22:46, 3 December 2024

Condition of reduced emotional reactivity in an individual

Reduced affect display, sometimes referred to as emotional blunting or emotional numbing, is a condition of reduced emotional reactivity in an individual. It manifests as a failure to express feelings either verbally or nonverbally, especially when talking about issues that would normally be expected to engage emotions. In this condition, expressive gestures are rare and there is little animation in facial expression or vocal inflection. Additionally, reduced affect can be symptomatic of autism, schizophrenia, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, depersonalization-derealization disorder, schizoid personality disorder or brain damage. It may also be a side effect of certain medications (e.g., antipsychotics and antidepressants).

However, reduced affect should be distinguished from apathy and anhedonia, which explicitly refer to a lack of emotional sensation.

Types

Constricted affect

A restricted or constricted affect is a reduction in an individual's expressive range and the intensity of emotional responses.

Blunted and flat affect

Blunted affect is a lack of affect more severe than restricted or constricted affect, but less severe than flat or flattened affect. "The difference between flat and blunted affect is in degree. A person with flat affect has no or nearly no emotional expression. They may not react at all to circumstances that usually evoke strong emotions in others. A person with blunted affect, on the other hand, has a significantly reduced intensity in emotional expression".

Shallow affect

Shallow affect has an equivalent meaning to blunted affect. In the Psychopathy Checklist, Factor 1 identifies shallow affect as a common attribute of psychopathy.

Brain structures

Individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show different regional brain activity in fMRI scans when presented with emotional stimuli compared to individuals with schizophrenia without blunted affect. For instance, individuals with schizophrenia without blunted affect show activation in the following brain areas when shown emotionally negative pictures: midbrain, pons, anterior cingulate cortex, insula, ventrolateral orbitofrontal cortex, anterior temporal pole, amygdala, medial prefrontal cortex and extrastriate visual cortex. Whereas, individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show activation in the following brain regions when shown emotionally negative pictures: midbrain, pons, anterior temporal pole and extrastriate visual cortex.

Limbic structures

Individuals with schizophrenia with flat affect show decreased activation in the limbic system when viewing emotional stimuli. In individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect neural processes begin in the occipitotemporal region of the brain and go through the ventral visual pathway and the limbic structures until they reach the inferior frontal areas. Damage to the amygdala of adult rhesus macaques early in life can permanently alter affective processing. Lesioning the amygdala causes blunted affect responses to both positive and negative stimuli. This effect is irreversible in the rhesus macaques; neonatal damage produces the same effect as damage that occurs later in life. The macaques' brain cannot compensate for early amygdala damage, even though significant neuronal growth may occur. There is some evidence that blunted affect symptoms in schizophrenia patients are not a result of just amygdala responsiveness, but a result of the amygdala not being integrated with other areas of the brain associated with emotional processing, particularly in amygdala-prefrontal cortex coupling. Damage in the limbic region prevents the amygdala from correctly interpreting emotional stimuli in individuals with schizophrenia by compromising the link between the amygdala and other brain regions associated with emotion.

Brainstem

Parts of the brainstem are responsible for passive emotional coping strategies characterized by disengagement or withdrawal from the external environment (quiescence, immobility, hyporeactivity), similar to what is seen in blunted affect. Individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect show activation of the brainstem during fMRI scans, particularly the right medulla and the left pons, when shown "sad" film excerpts. The bilateral midbrain is also activated in individuals with schizophrenia diagnosed with blunted affect. Activation of the midbrain is thought to be related to autonomic responses associated with the perceptual processing of emotional stimuli. This region usually becomes activated in diverse emotional states. When the connectivity between the midbrain and the medial prefrontal cortex is compromised in individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect an absence of emotional reaction to external stimuli results.

Prefrontal cortex

The prefrontal cortex, similarly to the limbic system, plays a role in the induction of an emotion and the regulation of emotions in healthy individuals. Individuals with schizophrenia show no changes in activation of the prefrontal cortex (PFC) when observing external sad stimuli, whereas healthy controls and patients with schizophrenia who were treated with quetiapine for blunted affect show activation of the medial PFC on fMRI. Individuals with schizophrenia who were reconditioned with quetiapine showed activation in other areas of the PFC as well, including the right medial prefrontal gyrus and the right and left orbitofrontal gyrus. This lack of PFC activity in people with schizophrenia with blunted affect has been postulated to be related to the impaired emotional processing observed in such individuals.

Anterior cingulate cortex

A positive correlation has been found between activation of the anterior cingulate cortex and the reported magnitude of sad feelings evoked by viewing sad film excerpts. The rostral subdivision of this region is possibly involved in detecting emotional signals. This region is different in individuals with schizophrenia with blunted affect.

Diagnoses

Schizophrenia

Flat and blunted affect is a defining characteristic in the presentation of schizophrenia. To reiterate, these individuals have a decrease in observed vocal and facial expressions as well as the use of gestures. One study of flat affect in schizophrenia found that "flat affect was more common in men and was associated with worse current quality of life" as well as having "an adverse effect on course of illness".

The study also reported a "dissociation between reported experience of emotion and its display" – supporting the suggestion made elsewhere that "blunted affect, including flattened facial expressiveness and lack of vocal inflection ... often disguises an individual's true feelings." Thus, feelings may merely be unexpressed, rather than lacking. On the other hand, "a lack of emotions which is due not to mere repression but to a real loss of contact with the objective world gives the observer a specific impression of 'queerness' ... the remainders of emotions or the substitutes for emotions usually refer to rage and aggressiveness". In the most extreme cases, there is a complete "dissociation from affective states". To further support this idea, a study examining emotion dysregulation found that individuals with schizophrenia could not exaggerate their emotional expression as healthy controls could. Participants were asked to express whatever emotions they had during a clip of a film, and the participants with schizophrenia showed deficits in the behavioral expression of their emotions.

There is still some debate regarding the source of flat affect in schizophrenia. However, some literature indicates abnormalities in the dorsal executive and ventral affective systems; it is argued that dorsal hypoactivation and ventral hyperactivation may be the source of flat affect. Further, the authors found deficits in the mirror neuron system may also contribute to flat affect in that the deficits may cause disruptions in the control of facial expression.

Another study found that when speaking, individuals with schizophrenia with flat affect demonstrate less inflection than normal controls and appear to be less fluent. Normal subjects appear to express themselves using more complex syntax, whereas flat affect subjects speak with fewer words, and fewer words per sentence. Flat affect individuals' use of context-appropriate words in both sad and happy narratives are similar to that of controls. It is very likely that flat affect is a result of deficits in motor expression as opposed to emotional processing. The moods of display are compromised, but subjective, autonomic, and contextual aspects of emotion are left intact.

Post-traumatic stress disorder

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) was previously known to cause negative feelings, such as depressed mood, re-experiencing and hyperarousal. However, recently, psychologists have started to focus their attention on the blunted affects and also the decrease in feeling and expressing positive emotions in PTSD patients. Blunted affect, or emotional numbness, is considered one of the consequences of PTSD because it causes a diminished interest in activities that produce pleasure (anhedonia) and produces feelings of detachment from others, restricted emotional expression and a reduced tendency to express emotions behaviorally. Blunted affect is often seen in veterans as a consequence of the psychological stressful experiences that caused PTSD. Blunted affect is a response to PTSD, it is considered one of the central symptoms in post-traumatic stress disorders and it is often seen in veterans who served in combat zones. In PTSD, blunted affect can be considered a psychological response to PTSD as a way to combat overwhelming anxiety that the patients feel. In blunted affect, there are abnormalities in circuits that also include the prefrontal cortex.

Assessment

In making assessments of mood and affect the clinician is cautioned that "it is important to keep in mind that demonstrative expression can be influenced by cultural differences, medication, or situational factors"; while the layperson is warned to beware of applying the criterion lightly to "friends, otherwise is likely to make false judgments, in view of the prevalence of schizoid and cyclothymic personalities in our 'normal' population, and our tendency to psychological hypochondriasis".

R. D. Laing in particular stressed that "such 'clinical' categories as schizoid, autistic, 'impoverished' affect ... all presuppose that there are reliable, valid impersonal criteria for making attributions about the other person's relation to actions. There are no such reliable or valid criteria".

Differential diagnosis

Blunted affect is very similar to anhedonia, which is the decrease or cessation of all feelings of pleasure (which thus affects enjoyment, happiness, fun, interest, and satisfaction). In the case of anhedonia, emotions relating to pleasure will not be expressed as much or at all because they are literally not experienced or are decreased. Both blunted affect and anhedonia are considered negative symptoms of schizophrenia, meaning that they are indicative of a lack of something. There are some other negative symptoms of schizophrenia which include avolition, alogia and catatonic behaviour.

Closely related is alexithymia – a condition describing people who "lack words for their feelings. They seem to lack feelings altogether, although this may actually be because of their inability to express emotion rather than from an absence of emotion altogether". Alexithymic patients however can provide clues via assessment presentation which may be indicative of emotional arousal.

"If the amygdala is severed from the rest of the brain, the result is a striking inability to gauge the emotional significance of events; this condition is sometimes called 'affective blindness'". In some cases, blunted affect can fade, but there is no conclusive evidence of why this can occur.

See also

References

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  34. Daniel Goleman, Emotional Intelligence, p. 15
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