However, reduced affect should be distinguished from apathy and anhedonia, which explicitly refer to a lack of emotional sensation.
The ICD-11 identifies several types of affect disturbances, particularly focusing on variations in the reduction of emotional expression. Constricted affect refers to a noticeable limitation in the range and intensity of expressed emotions, though it is less pronounced than blunted affect. Blunted affect, in turn, describes a more severe reduction in emotional expressiveness, though not as extreme as flat affect, which is characterised by an almost complete absence of any observable emotional expression.[8]
^Ackner, B. (1954). "Depersonalisation: I. Aetiology and phenomenology". Journal of Mental Science. 100 (421): 838–853. doi:10.1192/bjp.100.421.838. PMID13222014.
^Sierra, M.; Berrios, G.E. (2001). "The Phenomenological Stability of Depersonalization: Comparing the Old with the New". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 189 (9): 629–636. doi:10.1097/00005053-200109000-00010. PMID11580008. S2CID22920376.
^Sue, David; Sue, Diane M. (2012). "Mental Status Exam". Foundations of Counseling and Psychotherapy: Evidence-Based Practices for a Diverse Society. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 64–6. ISBN978-1-118-54210-1.