APS
2022 APS Annual Convention · 2022
Adults with More Severe Childhood Maltreatment Show Blunted Neural Response to and Greater Difficulty Learning from Facial Affect
- Aislinn Sandre
McGill University - Ross Otto
McGill University - Anna Weinberg
McGill University
Abstract
Adults with more severe maltreatment in childhood show decreased neural response to ambiguous facial affect, as well as decreased learning following this type of social feedback. These results suggest that childhood maltreatment contributes to long-term adaptations in socioemotional processing, effects that may increase risk for psychopathology.
Childhood Adversity