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Review
. 2019 Jan;18(1):e12548.
doi: 10.1111/gbb.12548.

Congenital facial palsy and emotion processing: The case of Moebius syndrome

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Free article
Review

Congenital facial palsy and emotion processing: The case of Moebius syndrome

Elisa De Stefani et al. Genes Brain Behav. 2019 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

According to the Darwinian perspective, facial expressions of emotions evolved to quickly communicate emotional states and would serve adaptive functions that promote social interactions. Embodied cognition theories suggest that we understand others' emotions by reproducing the perceived expression in our own facial musculature (facial mimicry) and the mere observation of a facial expression can evoke the corresponding emotion in the perceivers. Consequently, the inability to form facial expressions would affect the experience of emotional understanding. In this review, we aimed at providing account on the link between the lack of emotion production and the mechanisms of emotion processing. We address this issue by taking into account Moebius syndrome, a rare neurological disorder that primarily affects the muscles controlling facial expressions. Individuals with Moebius syndrome are born with facial paralysis and inability to form facial expressions. This makes them the ideal population to study whether facial mimicry is necessary for emotion understanding. Here, we discuss behavioral ambiguous/mixed results on emotion recognition deficits in Moebius syndrome suggesting the need to investigate further aspects of emotional processing such as the physiological responses associated with the emotional experience during developmental age.

Keywords: Moebius syndrome; autonomic nervous system; congenital facial palsy; embodied simulation theories; emotion understanding; emotional processing; facial expressions; facial mimicry; mirror neuron system; recognition of emotions.

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