Literature DB >> 22302842

Goal-directed behavior under emotional distraction is preserved by enhanced task-specific activation.

Michèle Wessa1, Janine Heissler, Sandra Schönfelder, Philipp Kanske.   

Abstract

Despite the distracting effects of emotional stimuli on concurrent task performance, humans are able to uphold goal-directed behavior. Here, we investigated the hypothesis that this effect is due to the enhanced recruitment of task-specific neural resources. In a two-step functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we first localized those areas involved in mental arithmetics by contrasting arithmetic problems with a number detection task. The resulting activation maps were then used as masks in a second experiment that compared the effects of neutral and emotional distracter images on mental arithmetics. We found increased response times in the emotional distracter condition, accompanied by enhanced activation in task-specific areas, including superior parietal cortex, dorsolateral and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. This activation increase correlated with larger behavioral impairment through emotional distraction. Similar error rates in both conditions indicate that cognitive task performance is preserved through enhanced recruitment of task-specific neural resources when emotional distracter stimuli are present.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22302842      PMCID: PMC3594722          DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsr098

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci        ISSN: 1749-5016            Impact factor:   3.436


  35 in total

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  13 in total

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2.  Does valence influence perceptual bias towards incongruence during binocular rivalry?

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4.  Distracting tracking: Interactions between negative emotion and attentional load in multiple-object tracking.

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Review 7.  Emotion regulation, attention to emotion, and the ventral attentional network.

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8.  Implicit and Explicit Attention to Pictures and Words: An fMRI-Study of Concurrent Emotional Stimulus Processing.

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9.  Emotional Distraction and Bodily Reaction: Modulation of Autonomous Responses by Anodal tDCS to the Prefrontal Cortex.

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