Attention and regulation during emotional word comprehension in older adults: Evidence from event-related potentials and brain oscillations

被引:5
|
作者
Ku, Li-Chuan [1 ,2 ]
Allen, John J. B. [1 ]
Lai, Vicky T. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Arizona, Dept Psychol, 1503 E Univ Blvd, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
[2] Univ Arizona, Cognit Sci Program, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA
关键词
Aging; Emotional words; Positivity bias effect; Event-related potentials; Theta oscillations; Alpha oscillations; AMYGDALA FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY; AGE-DIFFERENCES; TIME-COURSE; COGNITIVE REAPPRAISAL; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; NEGATIVE IMAGES; FRONTAL THETA; AROUSAL; RESPONSES; VALENCE;
D O I
10.1016/j.bandl.2022.105086
中图分类号
R36 [病理学]; R76 [耳鼻咽喉科学];
学科分类号
100104 ; 100213 ;
摘要
Older adults often show a positivity bias effect during picture processing, focusing more on positive than negative information. It is unclear whether this positivity bias effect generalizes to language and whether arousal matters. The present study investigated how age affects emotional word comprehension with varied valence (positive, negative) and arousal (high, low). We recorded older and younger participants' brainwaves (EEG) while they read positive/negative and high/low-arousing words and pseudowords, and made word/non-word judgments. Older adults showed increased N400s and left frontal alpha decreases (300-450 ms) for low-arousing positive as compared to low-arousing negative words, suggesting an arousal-dependent positivity bias during lexical retrieval. Both age groups showed similar LPPs to negative words. Older adults further showed a larger midfrontal theta increase (500-700 ms) than younger adults for low-arousing negative words, possibly indicating down-regulation of negative meanings of low-arousing words. Altogether, our data supported the strength and vulnerability integration model of aging.
引用
收藏
页数:14
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