Emotional expectations influence neural sensitivity to fearful faces in humans:An event-related potential study

被引:3
|
作者
YANG JieMin1
2School of Psychology
机构
基金
中国国家自然科学基金; 中央高校基本科研业务费专项资金资助;
关键词
negative bias; facial emotions; emotional expectation; event-related potential;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R33 [人体生理学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
The present study tested whether neural sensitivity to salient emotional facial expressions was influenced by emotional expectations induced by a cue that validly predicted the expression of a subsequently presented target face. Event-related potentials (ERPs) elicited by fearful and neutral faces were recorded while participants performed a gender discrimination task under cued (‘expected’) and uncued (‘unexpected’) conditions. The behavioral results revealed that accuracy was lower for fearful compared with neutral faces in the unexpected condition, while accuracy was similar for fearful and neutral faces in the expected condition. ERP data revealed increased amplitudes in the P2 component and 200–250 ms interval for unexpected fearful versus neutral faces. By contrast, ERP responses were similar for fearful and neutral faces in the expected condition. These findings indicate that human neural sensitivity to fearful faces is modulated by emotional expectations. Although the neural system is sensitive to unpredictable emotionally salient stimuli, sensitivity to salient stimuli is reduced when these stimuli are predictable.
引用
收藏
页码:1361 / 1368
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Emotional expectations influence neural sensitivity to fearful faces in humans: An event-related potential study
    Yang JieMin
    Yuan JiaJin
    Li Hong
    [J]. SCIENCE CHINA-LIFE SCIENCES, 2010, 53 (11) : 1361 - 1368
  • [2] Emotional expectations influence neural sensitivity to fearful faces in humans: An event-related potential study
    JieMin Yang
    JiaJin Yuan
    Hong Li
    [J]. Science China Life Sciences, 2010, 53 : 1361 - 1368
  • [3] Emotional expectations influence neural sensitivity to fearful faces in humans:An event-related potential study
    YANG JieMin YUAN JiaJin LI Hong Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality SWU Ministry of Education of China Chongqing ChinaSchool of Psychology Southwest University Chongqin China
    [J]. Science China(Life Sciences)., 2010, 53 (11) - 1368
  • [4] The neural processing of fearful faces without attention and consciousness: An event-related potential study
    Wang, Lili
    Fu, Shimin
    Feng, Chunliang
    Luo, Wenbo
    Zhu, Xiangru
    Luo, Yue-jia
    [J]. NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 2012, 506 (02) : 317 - 321
  • [5] The effect of fearful faces on the attentional blink is modulated by emotional task relevance: An event-related potential study
    Sun, Meng
    Liu, Fang
    Cui, Lixia
    Wei, Ping
    Zhang, Qin
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2021, 162
  • [6] Effects of anxiety on the processing of fearful and happy faces: An event-related potential study
    Holmes, Amanda
    Nielsen, Maria Kragh
    Green, Simon
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2008, 77 (02) : 159 - 173
  • [7] Early Influence of Emotional Scenes on the Encoding of Fearful Expressions With Different Intensities: An Event-Related Potential Study
    Song, Sutao
    Wu, Meiyun
    Feng, Chunliang
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN HUMAN NEUROSCIENCE, 2022, 16
  • [8] Recognition memory for emotional and neutral faces: An event-related potential study
    Johansson, M
    Mecklinger, A
    Treese, AC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2004, 16 (10) : 1840 - 1853
  • [9] Alterations in neural processing of emotional faces in adolescent anorexia nervosa patients - an event-related potential study
    Sfaerlea, Anca
    Greimel, Ellen
    Platt, Belinda
    Bartling, Juergen
    Schulte-Koerne, Gerd
    Dieler, Alica C.
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2016, 119 : 141 - 155
  • [10] Early processing of emotional faces in children with autism: An event-related potential study
    Batty, Magali
    Meaux, Emilie
    Wittemeyer, Kerstin
    Roge, Bernadette
    Taylor, Margot J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 109 (04) : 430 - 444