| Literature DB >> 20428514 |
Fabien D'Hondt1, Maryse Lassonde, Olivier Collignon, Anne-Sophie Dubarry, Manon Robert, Simon Rigoulot, Jacques Honoré, Franco Lepore, Henrique Sequeira.
Abstract
Current research in affective neuroscience suggests that the emotional content of visual stimuli activates brain-body responses that could be critical to general health and physical disease. The aim of this study was to develop an integrated neurophysiological approach linking central and peripheral markers of nervous activity during the presentation of natural scenes in order to determine the temporal stages of brain processing related to the bodily impact of emotions. More specifically, whole head magnetoencephalogram (MEG) data and skin conductance response (SCR), a reliable autonomic marker of central activation, were recorded in healthy volunteers during the presentation of emotional (unpleasant and pleasant) and neutral pictures selected from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS). Analyses of event-related magnetic fields (ERFs) revealed greater activity at 180 ms in an occipitotemporal component for emotional pictures than for neutral counterparts. More importantly, these early effects of emotional arousal on cerebral activity were significantly correlated with later increases in SCR magnitude. For the first time, a neuromagnetic cortical component linked to a well-documented marker of bodily arousal expression of emotion, namely, the SCR, was identified and located. This finding sheds light on the time course of the brain-body interaction with emotional arousal and provides new insights into the neural bases of complex and reciprocal mind-body links.Entities:
Keywords: arousal; brain–body; emotion; magneto-encephalography; principal component analysis; skin conductance response
Year: 2010 PMID: 20428514 PMCID: PMC2859881 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2010.00033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Means of a priori ratings for unpleasant, neutral, and pleasant pictures selected from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS). (A) Valence ratings for women; (B) valence ratings for men; (C) arousal ratings for women; (D) arousal ratings for men (*p < 0.001).
Figure 2Validation of picture selection using correlations between standardized (a priori) ratings by the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) and mean subjective (a posteriori) ratings of unpleasant, neutral, and pleasant images. (A) Valence ratings for women; (B) valence ratings for men; (C) arousal ratings for women; (D) arousal ratings for men.
Figure 3Emotional arousal effect on skin conductance response (SCR). (A) Grand average of SCR as a function of time and emotional content. (B) Mean normalized SCR magnitude as a function of emotional content (*p = 0.003).
Figure 4Factor loadings for the selected SFs and TFs, and the corresponding percentage of variance accounted for by each factor. (A) Topographic maps of factor loadings for the selected spatial factors (SFs) as recorded by MEG sensors. (B) Factor loadings of the selected temporal factors (TFs) as a function of time.
Figure 5Emotional arousal effect on virtual event-related magnetic field (ERF). (A) Grand average of the mean factor scores of the occipitotemporal component (SF3) as a function of time and emotional condition. Gray bar indicates the latency (revealed by TF3 extracted from temporal PCA), for which a significant emotional arousal effect was observed. (B) Mean factor scores of TF3 (180 ms latency) for SF3 (occipitotemporal component) as a function of emotional content (*p = 0.004). Factor scores (y axis) are unitless dimensions.
Figure 6Emotional arousal effects. (A) Significant rank correlation for arousal effects between SCR and ERF. (B) Cortical maps of the grand average (n = 18) of normalized current dipole densities over the bilateral occipitotemporal areas.