| Literature DB >> 26074808 |
Pan Liu1, Simon Rigoulot2, Marc D Pell1.
Abstract
Evidence that culture modulates on-line neural responses to the emotional meanings encoded by vocal and facial expressions was demonstrated recently in a study comparing English North Americans and Chinese (Liu et al., 2015). Here, we compared how individuals from these two cultures passively respond to emotional cues from faces and voices using an Oddball task. Participants viewed in-group emotional faces, with or without simultaneous vocal expressions, while performing a face-irrelevant visual task as the EEG was recorded. A significantly larger visual Mismatch Negativity (vMMN) was observed for Chinese vs. English participants when faces were accompanied by voices, suggesting that Chinese were influenced to a larger extent by task-irrelevant vocal cues. These data highlight further differences in how adults from East Asian vs. Western cultures process socio-emotional cues, arguing that distinct cultural practices in communication (e.g., display rules) shape neurocognitive activity associated with the early perception and integration of multi-sensory emotional cues.Entities:
Keywords: EEG/ERPs; cross-cultural; emotional prosody; facial expression; vMMN
Year: 2015 PMID: 26074808 PMCID: PMC4448034 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2015.00311
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Mean recognition rates (percent correct target identification) and emotional intensity ratings of the vocal and facial stimuli by emotion and cultural group (standard deviation in parentheses).
| Voices | Faces | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English | Chinese | English | Chinese | |||||
| Fear | Sadness | Fear | Sadness | Fear | Sadness | Fear | Sadness | |
| 90.6 (1.8) | 92.5 (2.7) | 91.2 (5.2) | 91.2 (5.2) | 90.8 (8.6) | 91.7 (9.3) | 91.2 (7.6) | 90.9 (10.0) | |
| 2.4 (0.3) | 2.4 (0.4) | 2.5 (0.3) | 2.4 (0.3) | 2.4 (0.3) | 2.4 (0.4) | 2.3 (0.4) | 2.6 (0.5) | |
For each stimulus, the participant made two consecutive judgments: they first identified the emotion being expressed by each item in a six forced-choice emotion recognition task (with happiness, sadness, anger, disgust, fear, neutrality as the 6 options); immediately after, they rated the intensity of the emotion they had selected in the previous recognition task on a 5-point rating scale, where 0 indicated “not intense at all” and 4 indicated “very intense”.
Figure 1Examples of facial and vocal stimuli. Left, example of Chinese fearful face and Chinese pseudo-sentence. Right, example of Caucasian sad face and English pseudo-sentence.
Figure 2Task procedures for each of the three conditions in the Oddball task. In all conditions, each trial last for 800 ms; the variable inter-trial-interval varied between 500–1000 ms. In the face-voice and face-tone conditions, the visual and auditory stimuli were synchronized. From top to bottom: face-only, face-voice, face-tone.
Figure 3Grand averages elicited by Standard trials (solid lines), Deviant trials (dotted lines), and the difference wave (dashed lines; Deviant—Standard) at Oz electrode for each condition of eachgroup (negative is plotted down).
Figure 4(A) Grand averages at Oz electrode and topographic maps of vMMN (100–200 ms) for each condition of each group; (B) Mean amplitude values of vMMN averaged across selected electrodes for each condition of each group. **: p < 0.05.
Types of standard and deviant trials of each block in each condition.
| Condition 1 | Condition 2 | Condition 3 | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Face-only | Face- | Face- | |||||
| Standard | Deviant | Standard | Deviant | Congruence of deviant | Standard | Deviant | |
| Block 1 | Congruent | ||||||
| Block 2 | Incongruent | ||||||
| Block 3 | Incongruent | ||||||
| Block 4 | Congruent | ||||||
Facial stimuli (in bold) of each block are identical across three conditions; auditory stimuli (in italic) are identical across standard and deviant trials within each block. In each block of each condition, MMN was calculated by subtracting the ERP responses to Standards from that to the Deviants in the same block. i.e., in each block, MMN = Deviant (10%)—Standard (80%).