| Literature DB >> 23481617 |
Christian Steinberg1, Ann-Kathrin Bröckelmann, Maimu Rehbein, Christian Dobel, Markus Junghöfer.
Abstract
Various pathway models for emotional processing suggest early prefrontal contributions to affective stimulus evaluation. Yet, electrophysiological evidence for such rapid modulations is still sparse. In a series of four MEG/EEG studies which investigated associative learning in vision and audition using a novel MultiCS Conditioning paradigm, many different neutral stimuli (faces, tones) were paired with aversive and appetitive events in only two to three learning instances. Electrophysiological correlates of neural activity revealed highly significant amplified processing for conditioned stimuli within distributed prefrontal and sensory cortical networks. In both, vision and audition, affect-specific responses occurred in two successive waves of rapid (vision: 50-80 ms, audition: 25-65 ms) and mid-latency (vision: >130 ms, audition: >100 ms) processing. Interestingly, behavioral measures indicated that MultiCS Conditioning successfully prevented contingency awareness. We conclude that affective processing rapidly recruits highly elaborate and widely distributed networks with substantial capacity for fast learning and excellent resolving power.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23481617 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2012.02.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Psychol ISSN: 0301-0511 Impact factor: 3.251