| Literature DB >> 21516545 |
Edward M Bernat1, Meredith Cadwallader, Dongju Seo, Nathalie Vizueta, Christopher J Patrick.
Abstract
Cognitive control of emotion has been investigated using tasks prompting participants to increase or decrease emotional responding to affective pictures. This study provides a more comprehensive evaluation of responding in this task by including: pleasant and unpleasant pictures, increase and decrease instructions, additional physiological measures, and a fully randomized design. Findings suggest that control efforts did modulate higher-level affective responses indexed by self-reported valence and expressive facial muscles, but not lower-level affective responses indexed by startle blink and heart rate. Similarly, electrocortical measures evidenced expectable affective responses and control-related activity, but no modulation of affective patterns due to the control efforts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21516545 DOI: 10.1080/87565641.2010.549881
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Neuropsychol ISSN: 1532-6942 Impact factor: 2.253