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Facial emotion processing hemispheric bias is weakly associated with handedness, autistic traits and biological sex, but not age

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posted on 2025-04-04, 00:24 authored by Bridgette SperanzaBridgette Speranza, M Do, Aron HillAron Hill, PH Donaldson, Peter EnticottPeter Enticott, Melissa KirkovskiMelissa Kirkovski
Abstract Background Right-hemisphere brain regions are strongly implicated in facial emotion processing (FEP), a phenomenon termed right-hemispheric bias. Variability in FEP hemispheric bias is thought to underpin differences in facial emotion recognition ability and has been associated with age, handedness, biological sex, and autistic traits. However, findings from research to date investigating factors associated with FEP hemispheric bias have been inconsistent. Objective To examine if FEP hemispheric bias can be predicted by individual factors such as age, biological sex, handedness, and autistic traits. Methods 427 adults recruited from the general population aged 18–67 years completed the Autism-spectrum Quotient. We also assessed covariates previously linked with FEP hemispheric bias including age, handedness, and biological sex. FEP hemispheric bias was indexed using laterality quotients calculated from a Chimeric Faces Task, where participants indicated which of two identical (but mirrored) half-emotional half-neutral (no emotion) chimeric faces were more emotive. Results Linear regression models revealed that (1) handedness predicted FEP hemispheric choice bias, (2) the attention switching Autism-spectrum Quotient subscale predicted FEP hemispheric reaction time bias, and (3) the imagination Autism-spectrum Quotient subscale predicted FEP hemispheric reaction time bias for males, but not females. Conclusions These findings indicate that the relationship between autistic traits and FEP hemispheric bias is nuanced. Additionally, handedness influences hemispheric bias effects during FEP. Future research should endeavour to investigate if FEP hemispheric bias is dependent on the emotion being observed and consider using more direct measures of hemispheric bias.

History

Journal

BMC Psychology

Volume

13

Article number

271

Pagination

1-13

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2050-7283

eISSN

2050-7283

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

BioMed Central