Dynamic Facial Expressions Prime the Processing of Emotional Prosody

被引:20
|
作者
Garrido-Vasquez, Patricia [1 ,2 ]
Pell, Marc D. [3 ]
Paulmann, Silke [4 ]
Kotz, Sonja A. [2 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Justus Liebig Univ Giessen, Dept Expt Psychol & Cognit Sci, Giessen, Germany
[2] Max Planck Inst Human Cognit & Brain Sci, Dept Neuropsychol, Leipzig, Germany
[3] McGill Univ, Sch Commun Sci & Disorders, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[4] Univ Essex, Dept Psychol, Colchester, Essex, England
[5] Univ Maastricht, Dept Neuropsychol & Psychopharmacol, Maastricht, Netherlands
来源
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
emotion; priming; event-related potentials; cross-modal prediction; dynamic faces; prosody; audiovisual; parahippocampal gyrus; EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS; AUDIOVISUAL INTEGRATION; BRAIN POTENTIALS; SPEECH PROSODY; TIME-COURSE; PERCEPTION; VOICE; FACE; INFORMATION; REPRESENTATION;
D O I
10.3389/fnhum.2018.00244
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Evidence suggests that emotion is represented supramodally in the human brain. Emotional facial expressions, which often precede vocally expressed emotion in real life, can modulate event-related potentials (N100 and P200) during emotional prosody processing. To investigate these cross-modal emotional interactions, two lines of research have been put forward: cross-modal integration and cross-modal priming. In cross-modal integration studies, visual and auditory channels are temporally aligned, while in priming studies they are presented consecutively. Here we used cross-modal emotional priming to study the interaction of dynamic visual and auditory emotional information. Specifically, we presented dynamic facial expressions (angry, happy, neutral) as primes and emotionally-intoned pseudo-speech sentences (angry, happy) as targets. We were interested in how prime-target congruency would affect early auditory event-related potentials, i.e., N100 and P200, in order to shed more light on how dynamic facial information is used in cross-modal emotional prediction. Results showed enhanced N100 amplitudes for incongruently primed compared to congruently and neutrally primed emotional prosody, while the latter two conditions did not significantly differ. However, N100 peak latency was significantly delayed in the neutral condition compared to the other two conditions. Source reconstruction revealed that the right parahippocampal gyrus was activated in incongruent compared to congruent trials in the N100 time window. No significant ERP effects were observed in the P200 range. Our results indicate that dynamic facial expressions influence vocal emotion processing at an early point in time, and that an emotional mismatch between a facial expression and its ensuing vocal emotional signal induces additional processing costs in the brain, potentially because the cross-modal emotional prediction mechanism is violated in case of emotional prime-target incongruency.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Neural processing of dynamic emotional facial expressions in psychopaths
    Decety, Jean
    Skelly, Laurie
    Yoder, Keith J.
    Kiehl, Kent A.
    [J]. SOCIAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 9 (01) : 36 - 49
  • [2] Selective processing of emotional facial expressions
    Schupp, HT
    Stockburger, J
    Bahlmann, J
    Weike, AI
    Öhman, A
    Hamm, AO
    [J]. PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 38 : S87 - S87
  • [3] Emotional elicitation by dynamic facial expressions
    [J]. Sato, W. (L50158@sakura.kudpc.kyoto-u.ac.jp), (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Computer Society):
  • [4] The dynamic aspects of emotional facial expressions
    Sato, W
    Yoshikawa, S
    [J]. COGNITION & EMOTION, 2004, 18 (05) : 701 - 710
  • [5] Emotional elicitation by dynamic facial expressions
    Sato, W
    Yoshikawa, S
    [J]. 2005 4TH IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON DEVELOPMENT AND LEARNING, 2005, : 170 - 174
  • [6] Enhanced perceptual, emotional, and motor processing in response to dynamic facial expressions of emotion
    Yoshikawa, Sakiko
    Sato, Wataru
    [J]. JAPANESE PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2006, 48 (03) : 213 - 222
  • [7] The Role of Gaze in the Processing of Emotional Facial Expressions
    Rigato, Silvia
    Farroni, Teresa
    [J]. EMOTION REVIEW, 2013, 5 (01) : 36 - 40
  • [8] Featural processing in recognition of emotional facial expressions
    Beaudry, Olivia
    Roy-Charland, Annie
    Perron, Melanie
    Cormier, Isabelle
    Tapp, Roxane
    [J]. COGNITION & EMOTION, 2014, 28 (03) : 416 - 432
  • [9] Magnetoencephalographic correlates of the processing of emotional facial expressions
    LaNoue, MD
    Edgar, CJ
    Weisend, MP
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, : 70 - 70
  • [10] Adaptation to natural dynamic facial emotional expressions
    Korolkova, Olga A.
    [J]. PERCEPTION, 2015, 44 : 18 - 19