| Literature DB >> 22642400 |
Birgit Derntl1, Ute Habel, Simon Robinson, Christian Windischberger, Ilse Kryspin-Exner, Ruben C Gur, Ewald Moser.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mounting evidence indicates that humans have significant difficulties in understanding emotional expressions from individuals of different ethnic backgrounds, leading to reduced recognition accuracy and stronger amygdala activation. However, the impact of gender on the behavioral and neural reactions during the initial phase of cultural assimilation has not been addressed. Therefore, we investigated 24 Asians students (12 females) and 24 age-matched European students (12 females) during an explicit emotion recognition task, using Caucasian facial expressions only, on a high-field MRI scanner.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22642400 PMCID: PMC3404024 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-13-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Figure 1Behavioral performance during the explicit emotion recognition task showing recognition accuracy with standard error of the mean (SEM) for all emotions. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed a significant ethnic group effect (p < .001) with lower performance of the Asian participants, in particular for angry and disgusted faces marked with an asterisk
Figure 2Results of whole-slab analysis showing activation maps of random effects analysis for all emotions minus neutral on one axial slice comprising the amygdala for the Asian sample (left) and for the Caucasian European sample (right) (threshold: p < .05, FDR corrected). Stronger bilateral amygdala response to emotional categories (minus neutral expressions) is visible in both groups.
Results from the whole brain analysis showing activation in a widespread neural network during recognition of emotional faces in Asians and Europeans Inferior frontal gyrus (region) thresholded at p < .05, FDR corrected
| | −4 | −30 | −10 | 1227 | 10.99 | L | Brainstem | |
| | 38 | 12 | −30 | 536 | 8.60 | R | Superior temporal gyrus | |
| | 20 | 20 | −22 | 105 | 6.46 | R | Inferior frontal gyrus | |
| | −22 | 16 | −26 | 575 | 5.15 | L | ||
| | −44 | −36 | −22 | 98 | 5.11 | L | Fusiform gyrus | |
| | 6 | 16 | −12 | 37 | 4.35 | R | Thalamus | |
| | −62 | −6 | −18 | 29 | 3.87 | L | Middle temporal gyrus | |
| | −16 | 32 | −22 | 20 | 3.70 | L | Orbitofrontal gyrus | |
| | 16 | −4 | −24 | 36 | 3.45 | R | Amygdala | |
| | −20 | −56 | −16 | 23 | 3.44 | L | Cerebellum | |
| | −22 | 0 | −18 | 21 | 3.40 | L | Amygdala | |
| | 34 | −84 | −14 | 2389 | 8.46 | R | Inferior occipital gyrus | |
| | −44 | −74 | −14 | 738 | 8.43 | L | Middle occipital gyrus | |
| | 38 | −64 | −18 | 811 | 7.99 | R | Fusiform gyrus | |
| | 28 | 56 | −34 | 47 | 4.51 | R | Orbitofrontal gyrus | |
| | −18 | −2 | −16 | 44 | 4.43 | L | Amygdala | |
| | 22 | 0 | −18 | 31 | 4.13 | R | Amygdala | |
| −16 | 22 | −20 | 40 | 3.91 | L | Inferior frontal gyrus | ||
MNI coordinates, cluster size (k > 20), t-values, laterality and region.
Figure 3Results from ROI analysis showing mean parameter estimates of the amygdala for the emotion > neutral contrast for female (FP) and male posers (MP) for Asian females (AF), Asian males (AM), European females (EF) and European males (EM), revealing significantly stronger amygdala activation in the Asian sample (p = .004). Moreover, a significant gender of poser-by-ethnic group interaction (p = .040) emerged, indicating stronger activation of the Asian participants for male posers (p = .009) and a trend for stronger activation for female posers (p = .079)
Figure 4Correlation analysis between mean parameter estimates of the amygdala region and duration of stay in Europe (months) showing a significant negative association (r(22) = −0.394, p = .031) indicating stronger amygdala response in those Asian participants with shorter duration of stay and thus probably reflecting adaptation effects on the neural level.