| Literature DB >> 23801957 |
Anne-Marie Brouwer1, Nelleke van Wouwe, Christian Mühl, Jan van Erp, Alexander Toet.
Abstract
Most studies on physiological effects of emotion-inducing images and sounds examine stimulus locked variables reflecting a state of at most a few seconds. We here aimed to induce longer lasting emotional states using blocks of repetitive visual, auditory, and bimodal stimuli corresponding to specific valence and arousal levels. The duration of these blocks enabled us to reliably measure heart rate variability as a possible indicator of arousal. In addition, heart rate and skin conductance were determined without taking stimulus timing into account. Heart rate was higher for pleasant and low arousal stimuli compared to unpleasant and high arousal stimuli. Heart rate variability and skin conductance increased with arousal. Effects of valence and arousal on cardiovascular measures habituated or remained the same over 2-min intervals whereas the arousal effect on skin conductance increased. We did not find any effect of stimulus modality. Our results indicate that blocks of images and sounds of specific valence and arousal levels consistently influence different physiological parameters. These parameters need not be stimulus locked. We found no evidence for differences in emotion induction between visual and auditory stimuli, nor did we find bimodal stimuli to be more potent than unimodal stimuli. The latter could be (partly) due to the fact that our bimodal stimuli were not optimally congruent.Entities:
Keywords: arousal; heart rate; sensory modality; skin conductance; valence
Year: 2013 PMID: 23801957 PMCID: PMC3689025 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Numbers and names of the visual (IAPS) (Lang et al., .
| 2141 | 242 | 1463 | 110 | 2730 | 255 | 4660 | 202 | 1390 | 152 |
| Grieving fem | Female cough | Kittens | Baby | Native boy | Vomit | Erotic couple | Erotic fem | Bees | Tropical |
| 3230 | 241 | 2208 | 813 | 3060 | 625 | 8030 | 415 | 1560 | 114 |
| Dying man | Male cough | Bride | Wedding | Mutilation | May day | Skier | Count down | Hawk | Cattle |
| 3300 | 280 | 4623 | 221 | 3150 | 106 | 8080 | 352 | 2220 | 251 |
| Disabled child | Woman crying | Romance | Male laugh | Mutilation | Growl | Sailing | Sports crowd | Male face | Nose blow |
| 8230 | 283 | 5910 | 601 | 6250 | 289 | 8180 | 353 | 2635 | 113 |
| Boxer | Fight | Fireworks | Colonial music | Aimed gun | Gun shot | Cliff divers | Base ball | Cowboy | Cows |
| 9120 | 611 | 7330 | 721 | 9050 | 501 | 8185 | 360 | 3210 | 729 |
| Oil fires | Battle taps | Ice cream | Beer | Plane crash | Plane crash | Sky divers | Roller coaster | Surgery | Paper |
| 9520 | 423 | 8040 | 816 | 9250 | 600 | 8200 | 311 | 4613 | 364 |
| Kids | Injury | Diver | Guitar | War victim | Bike wreck | Water skier | Crowd | Condom | Bar |
| 9611 | 699 | 8120 | 820 | 9252 | 711 | 8400 | 365 | 7620 | 410 |
| Plane crash | Bomb | Athlete | Funk music | Dead body | Siren | Rafters | Party | Jet | Helicopter |
| 9301 | 250 | 8496 | 220 | 9921 | 244 | 8501 | 367 | 9411 | 722 |
| Toilet | Male sneeze | Water slide | Boy laugh | Fire | Man wheeze | Money | Casino | Boy | Walking |
Stimuli that were presented simultaneously in the bimodal condition are in the same row of each block.
Valence and arousal scores with their standard deviations of stimuli used in each of the five emotional blocks as previously reported in the IAPS (Lang et al., .
| neg-lowar | 2.60 | 2.35 | 1.66 | 0.71 | 5.39 | 4.63 | 2.20 | 0.89 |
| pos-lowar | 7.33 | 7.48 | 1.59 | 0.64 | 5.44 | 5.33 | 2.30 | 1.02 |
| neg-highar | 2.29 | 1.84 | 1.65 | 0.54 | 6.64 | 6.23 | 2.15 | 1.20 |
| pos-highar | 7.47 | 7.13 | 1.58 | 0.53 | 6.75 | 5.86 | 2.08 | 1.15 |
| neutral | 5.12 | 4.85 | 1.74 | 0.50 | 5.06 | 4.35 | 2.00 | 0.81 |
| neg-lowar | 3.18 | 3.17 | 1.81 | 0.40 | 5.68 | 4.82 | 1.81 | 0.80 |
| pos-lowar | 6.98 | 7.07 | 1.86 | 0.64 | 5.61 | 5.44 | 1.86 | 0.98 |
| neg-highar | 2.73 | 2.92 | 1.68 | 0.55 | 6.80 | 5.40 | 1.68 | 1.01 |
| pos-highar | 7.09 | 6.73 | 1.84 | 0.64 | 6.88 | 5.94 | 1.84 | 1.05 |
| neutral | 4.88 | 5.26 | 1.76 | 0.43 | 5.48 | 4.05 | 1.76 | 1.10 |
| neg-lowar | 2.30 | 0.53 | 5.05 | 0.98 | ||||
| pos-lowar | 7.48 | 0.71 | 5.70 | 1.14 | ||||
| neg-highar | 2.05 | 0.51 | 6.13 | 0.89 | ||||
| pos-highar | 7.14 | 0.62 | 5.99 | 0.79 | ||||
| Neutral | 4.68 | 0.53 | 4.16 | 1.21 | ||||
For the bimodal block, we only present valence and arousal scores from our own participants.
Figure 1Heart rate (A), RMSSD, (B) and skin conductance (C) for each of the conditions. Error bars represent standard errors of the mean between participants. For heart rate, a repeated measure ANOVA indicates main effects of arousal and valence. For heart rate variability and skin conductance, repeated measures ANOVAs indicate main effects of arousal.
Figure 2Arousal and valence effects over time, averaged over modalities. Arousal effect on heart rate (A), valence effect on heart rate (B) and arousal effect on heart rate variability (RMSSD) (C), for the first and second 60 s of the block; arousal effect on skin conductance for the first through fourth 30 s of the block (D). Error bars represent standard errors of the mean between participants.