Some studies have found no impairments in recognition of emotions in dynamic stimuli or video - clips in those with DBDs (e.g., de Wied et al. 2005; Schwenck et al. 2012), while one study found significant deficits in
overall emotion recognition in adolescents with CD (Cohen and Strayer 1996), although data for individual emotions were not reported and it is therefore unclear whether some emotions were more affected than others.
Not exact matches
The kinds of static, grayscale stimuli depicting facial expressions used in most studies of facial
emotion recognition do not resemble the facial stimuli we see in everyday life, whilst studies employing vignettes or films have often required participants to label an
overall emotion and occasionally rate its strength and explain the reason for it.