Emotion processing deficits may have an important
effect on the quality of life of Alzheimer's disease
(AD) patients and their families, yet there are few studies
in this area and little is known about the cause of such
deficits in AD. This study sought to determine if some
AD patients have a disruption in a specific right hemisphere
emotion processing system, and to determine if the processing
of emotional facial expression is more vulnerable to the
pathology of AD than is the perception of emotional prosody.
It was specifically hypothesized that patients with greater
right hemisphere dysfunction (low spatial AD patients)
would be impaired on emotion processing tasks relative
to those with predominantly left hemisphere dysfunction
(low verbal AD patients). Both groups showed impairment
on emotion processing tasks but for different reasons.
The low verbal patients performed poorly on the affect
processing measures because they had difficulty comprehending
and/or remembering the task instructions. In contrast,
low spatial AD patients have emotion processing deficits
that are independent of language and/or memory and
may be due to a more general visuoperceptual deficit that
affects the perception of static but not dynamic affective
stimuli. (JINS, 1997, 3, 411–419.)