# Cross‐country variance in facial emotion recognition in presymptomatic and symptomatic behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia: Insights from the GENFI and ReDLat consortia

**Authors:** Liset de Boer, Lize C. Jiskoot, Harro Seelaar, John C. van Swieten, Agustin Ibanez, Marcelo Maito, Sol Fittipaldi, Julie F. H. De Houwer, Tine Swartenbroekx, Pam A. Boesjes, Rhian S. Convery, Eve Ferry‐Bolder, Phoebe Foster, Arabella Bouzigues, Lucy Chisman‐Russell, Esther van den Berg, Janne Papma, Sanne Franzen, Renelle Bourdage, James B. Rowe, Barbara Borroni, Daniela Galimberti, Pietro Tiraboschi, Mario Masellis, Elizabeth Finger, Robert Laforce, Caroline Graff, Alexander Gerhard, Raquel Sanchez‐Valle, Alexandre Mendonça, Fermin Moreno, Matthis Synofzik, Rik Vandenberghe, Simon Ducharme, Isabelle Le Ber, Johannes Levin, Thibaud Lebouvier, Benedetta Nacmias, Markus Otto, Christopher R. Butler, Isabel Santana, Maxime Bertoux, M. Carmela Tartaglia, Jonathan D. Rohrer, Jackie M. Poos

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/alz.70741 · 2025-10-14

## TL;DR

This study found that facial emotion recognition varies across countries in people with and without early signs of frontotemporal dementia, highlighting the need for culturally adapted tools.

## Contribution

The study reveals cross-country differences in facial emotion recognition that interact with demographic factors and vary by disease stage.

## Key findings

- Country accounted for 18-18.3% of FER variance in presymptomatic carriers and controls, and 9.9% in symptomatic bvFTD individuals.
- Cross-country differences in FER interacted with sex, age, and education effects.
- No cross-country differences were found in the neural correlates of FER in bvFTD individuals.

## Abstract

We investigated international differences in facial emotion recognition (FER) across stages of frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Previous studies may have missed early decline by combining data and masking variations in FER across countries.

An FER test was administered to 159 individuals with behavioral variant FTD, 521 presymptomatic pathogenic variant carriers, and 583 controls from 16 countries of residence. Linear mixed models assessed age, sex, education, and country effects on FER. Voxel‐based morphometry examined neural correlates across countries.

Country accounted for 18%–18.3% of FER variance in presymptomatic carriers and controls and 9.9% in individuals with behavioral variant of FTD (bvFTD). Cross‐country differences interacted with the effects of sex, age, and education. Neural correlates involving the frontal lobe and basal ganglia were identified in individuals with bvFTD, but no cross‐country differences were found.

These results underscore the need for culturally sensitive FER tools in research and clinical practice, especially as global multinational clinical trials emerge.

Performance on a test for facial emotion recognition (FER) varies between countries.The percentage of variance is lower in the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) compared to presymptomatic pathogenic variant carriers and healthy controls.Cross‐country differences interacted with the effects of sex, age, and education.There were no differences in brain correlates of FER across countries.

Performance on a test for facial emotion recognition (FER) varies between countries.

The percentage of variance is lower in the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) compared to presymptomatic pathogenic variant carriers and healthy controls.

Cross‐country differences interacted with the effects of sex, age, and education.

There were no differences in brain correlates of FER across countries.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** frontotemporal dementia (MONDO:0010857), behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (MONDO:0017160), bvFTD (MONDO:0017160)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** FTD (MESH:D057180)

## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12519523/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12519523