| Literature DB >> 28449127 |
Patricia E G Bestelmeyer1, Sonja A Kotz2,3, Pascal Belin4,5,6.
Abstract
Several theories conceptualise emotions along two main dimensions: valence (a continuum from negative to positive) and arousal (a continuum that varies from low to high). These dimensions are typically treated as independent in many neuroimaging experiments, yet recent behavioural findings suggest that they are actually interdependent. This result has impact on neuroimaging design, analysis and theoretical development. We were interested in determining the extent of this interdependence both behaviourally and neuroanatomically, as well as teasing apart any activation that is specific to each dimension. While we found extensive overlap in activation for each dimension in traditional emotion areas (bilateral insulae, orbitofrontal cortex, amygdalae), we also found activation specific to each dimension with characteristic relationships between modulations of these dimensions and BOLD signal change. Increases in arousal ratings were related to increased activations predominantly in voice-sensitive cortices after variance explained by valence had been removed. In contrast, emotions of extreme valence were related to increased activations in bilateral voice-sensitive cortices, hippocampi, anterior and midcingulum and medial orbito- and superior frontal regions after variance explained by arousal had been accounted for. Our results therefore do not support a complete segregation of brain structures underpinning the processing of affective dimensions.Entities:
Keywords: arousal; emotion; fMRI; valence; voice
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28449127 PMCID: PMC5597854 DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsx059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ISSN: 1749-5016 Impact factor: 3.436
Fig. 1Behavioural results. Behavioural ratings of (A) arousal and (B) valence of the stimulus set. (C) Scatterplot illustrating the quadratic relationship between valence and arousal ratings.
Fig. 2Overlapping activation maps for significant correlations between BOLD signal and arousal (blue) or valence (red) ratings (but without first removing variance explained by valence and arousal, respectively).
Fig. 3Activation maps of significant correlations between BOLD signal and (A) arousal after variance explained by valence has been removed. Significant relationships are evident in bilateral superior temporal gyri and right mid-occipital cortex. Overlap between this activation (blue) and that of the voice localiser (yellow) is shown in (B). Activation maps of significant correlations between BOLD signal and (C) valence after variance explained by arousal has been removed. Significant relationships are evident in bilateral superior temporal gyri, inferior frontal gyri, hippocampi, medial orbitofrontal, superior frontal gyri and midcingulum. Overlap between this activation (red) and that of the voice localiser (yellow) is shown in (D). Activations in (A) and (C) are illustrated on a T1-weighted average structural template. The line graphs illustrate BOLD signal change in response to the behavioural ratings (from 0 to 1; low to high arousal and negative to positive valence, respectively, in five bins of 0.2).
Areas revealing significant modulations with arousal and valence (before removing variance by the other dimension)
| Modulator | Anatomical definition | Peak voxel coordinates | Cluster size | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| − | ||||||
| Left precentral | −42 | 8 | 34 | 27.91 | ||
| Left inferior frontal (pars triangularis) | −39 | 32 | 19 | 27.40 | ||
| Right inferior frontal operculum | 45 | 8 | 28 | 17.21 | ||
| Right midfrontal | 42 | 38 | 16 | 13.51 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| Left inferior parietal | −30 | −49 | 40 | 22.07 | ||
| Left inferior parietal | −36 | −55 | 46 | 21.31 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| Right superior temporal | 48 | −1 | −11 | 20.71 | ||
| Right superior temporal | 51 | −10 | 1 | 15.46 | ||
| − | ||||||
| − | ||||||
| Left inferior frontal (pars triangularis) | −48 | 17 | 7 | 11.36 | ||
| − | − | − | ||||
| Left superior temporal | −42 | −13 | −8 | 17.21 | ||
| Left superior temporal | −54 | −7 | 4 | 15.34 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Left medial orbitofrontal | 0 | 38 | −17 | 17.75 | ||
| Left medial orbitofrontal | −9 | 53 | −11 | 17.44 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Right angular | 33 | −58 | 43 | 12.37 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Right supplementary motor area | 6 | 20 | 46 | 36.45 | ||
| Right insula | 30 | 23 | 1 | 28.46 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Left precentral | −39 | 8 | 31 | 30.34 | ||
| Left insula | −30 | 20 | 1 | 30.32 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Left anterior cingulum | 0 | 29 | −5 | 28.41 | ||
| Left medial orbitofrontal | −6 | 35 | −14 | 25.33 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| Left midtemporal | −57 | −61 | 16 | 14.68 | ||
| Left midtemporal | −30 | −52 | 19 | 10.07 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| − | − | |||||
| Left insula | −39 | −13 | −2 | 18.91 | ||
| Left midtemporal | −60 | −7 | −14 | 18.77 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| Right precuneus | 9 | −64 | 46 | 14.95 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Right angular | 33 | −58 | 43 | 11.64 | ||
| − | − | |||||
| Left midcingulum | −12 | −31 | 40 | 15.22 | ||
| Left midcingulum | −15 | −25 | 46 | 14.59 | ||
| − | ||||||
| Right midcingulum | 15 | −34 | 49 | 9.99 | ||