期刊论文详细信息
PSYCHONEUROENDOCRINOLOGY 卷:91
Morphine reduced perceived anger from neutral and implicit emotional expressions
Article
Loseth, Guro E.1  Eikemo, Marie2,3  Isager, Peder1  Holmgren, Jostein1  Laeng, Bruno1  Vindenes, Vigdis4  Hjornevik, Trine2  Leknes, Siri1 
[1] Univ Oslo, Dept Psychol, Postbox 1094 Blindern,Forskningsveien 3A, N-0317 Oslo, Norway
[2] Oslo Univ Hosp, Dept Diagnost Phys, Div Radiol & Nucl Med, Oslo, Norway
[3] Oslo Univ Hosp, Div Mental Hlth & Addict, Oslo, Norway
[4] Oslo Univ Hosp, Dept Forens Med, Oslo, Norway
关键词: Opioid;    mu-opioid;    Emotion perception;    Emotion recognition;    Morphine;    Social cognition;    Autism traits;   
DOI  :  10.1016/j.psyneuen.2018.02.035
来源: Elsevier
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【 摘 要 】

The mu-opioid system modulates responses to pain and psychosocial stress and mediates non-social and social reward. In humans, the mu-opioid agonist morphine can increase overt attention to the eye-region and visual exploration of faces with neutral expressions. However, little is known about how the human mu-opioid system influences sensitivity to and appraisal of subtle and explicit cues of social threats and reward. Here, we examined the effects of selective mu-opioid stimulation on perception of anger and happiness in faces with explicit, neutral or implicit emotion expressions. Sixty-three healthy adults (32 females) attended two sessions where they received either placebo or 10 mg per oral morphine in randomised order under double-blind conditions. Based on the known mu-opioid reduction of pain and discomfort, as well as reports suggesting that the non-specific partial agonist buprenorphine or the non-specific antagonist naltrexone affect appraisal of social emotional stimuli, we hypothesised that morphine would reduce threat sensitivity and enhance perception of happy facial expressions. While overall perception of others' happiness was unaffected by morphine treatment, morphine reduced perception of anger in stimuli with neutral and implicit expressions without affecting perception of explicit anger. This effect was statistically unrelated to gender, subjective drug effects, mood and autism trait measures. The finding that a low dose of mu-agonist reduced the propensity to perceive anger in photos with subtle facial expressions is consistent with the notion that mu-opioids mediate social confidence and reduce sensitivity to threat cues.

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