
It may feel to the other person like the survivor is now almost robotic in most interactions. For instance, a friend might find it odd that a warm smile is not reciprocated with a similar smile by the survivor. Other people may find it awkward or off-putting when the survivor does not display the emotions that would be normally expected in a given situation.

Rather than traversing the hills and valleys of normal emotional fluctuation, the person’s emotional experience is more akin to that of an even surface or flattened plain.Īs we are social beings, a flat affect can of course interfere with social relationships. It is simply that the person’s brain is no longer capable of experiencing the strong emotions we generally associate with having encountered such a situation. This is not to say that the person does not understand the importance of each situation.

A survivor with a flat affect may be told that a friend has died and blandly state, “That is too bad.” The same survivor could be told that he or she has won a huge contest and simply say, “That is nice.” Instead of being distraught and tearful in the first example or excited and elated in the second, everything ends up feeling to the survivor similarly ordinary. This symptom is most common in right-sided brain injuries. I would like to take a moment to explain one of those terms, “flat (or flattened) affect.”Ī flat (or flattened) affect is when a person does not display or experience emotions with the same intensity that he or she did before an injury so that the affect (mood) of the individual in question appears to be unchanging (flat). Learning to understand all these new terms while attempting to cope with an already trying experience can be quite dizzying.

There are so many terms that family and friends of brain injury survivors are exposed to that are simply not part of our day to day vocabulary.
