Emotion recognition represents the ability to encode an ensemble of sensory stimuli providing information about the emotional state of another individual. This ability is not unique to humans. An increasing number of studies suggest that many aspects of higher order social functions, including emotion recognition, might be present in species ranging from primates to rodents, indicating a conserved role in social animals. The aim of this review is to examine and compare how emotions are communicated and perceived in humans and other animals, with the intent to highlight possible new behavioral approaches and research perspectives. We summarize the evidence from human emotion recognition, and latest advances in the development of nonhuman animal behavioral tests, using or implying the use of this cognitive function. The differential implication of sensory modalities used by animals to communicate and decipher emotional states is also discussed. The opportunity to measure emotion recognition abilities in rodents may allow us to better identify the neural mechanisms mediating this complex function, thus promoting the development of new intervention strategies for several neuropsychiatric disorders characterized by social cognitive dysfunctions.

Understanding others: emotion recognition abilities in humans and other animals / Ferretti, Valentina; Papaleo, Francesco. - In: GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR. - ISSN 1601-1848. - 18:1(2018). [10.1111/gbb.12544]

Understanding others: emotion recognition abilities in humans and other animals

Ferretti, Valentina
Co-primo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
Papaleo, Francesco
Writing – Review & Editing
2018

Abstract

Emotion recognition represents the ability to encode an ensemble of sensory stimuli providing information about the emotional state of another individual. This ability is not unique to humans. An increasing number of studies suggest that many aspects of higher order social functions, including emotion recognition, might be present in species ranging from primates to rodents, indicating a conserved role in social animals. The aim of this review is to examine and compare how emotions are communicated and perceived in humans and other animals, with the intent to highlight possible new behavioral approaches and research perspectives. We summarize the evidence from human emotion recognition, and latest advances in the development of nonhuman animal behavioral tests, using or implying the use of this cognitive function. The differential implication of sensory modalities used by animals to communicate and decipher emotional states is also discussed. The opportunity to measure emotion recognition abilities in rodents may allow us to better identify the neural mechanisms mediating this complex function, thus promoting the development of new intervention strategies for several neuropsychiatric disorders characterized by social cognitive dysfunctions.
2018
emotion recognition, social behaviour, sensory modalities
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01g Articolo di rassegna (Review)
Understanding others: emotion recognition abilities in humans and other animals / Ferretti, Valentina; Papaleo, Francesco. - In: GENES BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR. - ISSN 1601-1848. - 18:1(2018). [10.1111/gbb.12544]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1416009
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