Emotional processing and executive functioning in children and adults with Tourette’s syndrome.
Tourette’s syndrome (TS) is predominantly a childhood disorder, with many of those who meet diagnostic criteria in childhood experiencing a remission of symptoms in adulthood. This indicates that the influence of TS on cognitive and emotional processing can best be understood by examining performance in both adults and children with TS. The present study examined emotional processing using a battery of face and prosody tasks with increasing levels of difficulty (same-different emotion discrimination, emotion naming, and emotion naming with conflict for prosody only). Experiment 1 compared the performance of children with TS-alone (n = 16) or TS+ADHD (n = 15) to healthy matched control children (n = 27). Compared to healthy control children, no significant group differences were found for those with TS-alone. Children with TS+ADHD showed subtle impairments on the more difficult emotion processing tasks relative to healthy control children, and differences were more pronounced for anger items (voice emotion naming, p < .05; voice emotion naming with conflict, p < .01). Experiment 2 compared the performance of adults with TS-alone (n = 23) to healthy matched controls (n = 21). No significant group differences were found, other than evidence of subtle impairment in the adults with TS-alone on the most complex task, again particularly for anger items (p < .05). Separate measurement of executive skills detected no evidence of impairment in children or adults with TS and little in the way of correlational evidence linking emotion recognition and executive skills. Implications of the findings for our understanding of emotion processing in TS are discussed. Citation: Drury, H., et al., Emotional processing and executive functioning in children and adults with Tourette’s syndrome. Child Neuropsychology, 2012. 18(3): p. 281-298.