Automatic detection of facial expressions during the Cyberball paradigm in Borderline Personality Disorder: a pilot study

Front Psychiatry. 2024 May 28:15:1354762. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1354762. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) symptoms include inappropriate control of anger and severe emotional dysregulation after rejection in daily life. Nevertheless, when using the Cyberball paradigm, a tossing game to simulate social exclusion, the seven basic emotions (happiness, sadness, anger, surprise, fear, disgust, and contempt) have not been exhaustively tracked out. It was hypothesized that these patients would show anger, contempt, and disgust during the condition of exclusion versus the condition of inclusion. When facial emotions are automatically detected by Artificial Intelligence, "blending", -or a mixture of at least two emotions- and "masking", -or showing happiness while expressing negative emotions- may be most easily traced expecting higher percentages during exclusion rather than inclusion. Therefore, face videos of fourteen patients diagnosed with BPD (26 ± 6 years old), recorded while playing the tossing game, were analyzed by the FaceReader software. The comparison of conditions highlighted an interaction for anger: it increased during inclusion and decreased during exclusion. During exclusion, the masking of surprise; i.e., displaying happiness while feeling surprised, was significantly more expressed. Furthermore, disgust and contempt were inversely correlated with greater difficulties in emotion regulation and symptomatology, respectively. Therefore, the automatic detection of emotional expressions during both conditions could be useful in rendering diagnostic guidelines in clinical scenarios.

Keywords: area under the curve; borderline personality disorder; cyberball paradigm; emotions; face; non-verbal expression; pattern analysis; social exclusion.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The FaceReader software was purchased using funds from the Consejo Nacional de Humanidades, Ciencia y Tecnología (CONAHCyT) (National Council of Humanities, Science, and Technology). AR-S was granted a scholarship to serve her psychiatric residency at the INPRFM. The Cátedras-CONACyT program 1080, with the project “Multidisciplinary and Integral Management of Borderline Personality Disorder and associated comorbidities”, financed AR-L. Leslie Calderón-Guzmán received the “Verano de la Investigación Científica” (Summer Scientific Research) scholarship in 2020, granted by the “Academia Mexicana de las Ciencias” (Mexican Academy of Sciences), to assist in the writing of this paper.