Topic: Ellen Leibenluft
Youth with bipolar disorder misread facial expressions as hostile and show heightened neural reactions when they focus on emotional aspects of neutral faces, researchers at the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) have discovered. Such a face-processing ...
Youngsters with pediatric bipolar disorder and healthy peers who have first-degree relatives with bipolar disorder share the same difficulty labeling facial emotions, NIMH researchers have discovered. "Since we know more about the circuitry of basic processes like facial emotion processing than we ...
Teens diagnosed with the bipolar disorder are more likely to interpret neutral facial expressions as hostile and react with fear, a new study shows.. Melissa DelBello, who researches mood disorders at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine in Ohio, US, says ...