| Literature DB >> 28943845 |
Haiyan Zhou1,2,3, Jialiang Guo1,4, Xiaomeng Ma1, Minghui Zhang1, Liqing Liu1, Lei Feng5,6, Jie Yang5,6, Zhijiang Wang7,8,9, Gang Wang5,6,10, Ning Zhong1,2,3,10,11.
Abstract
Self-referential emotion refers to the process of evaluating emotional stimuli with respect to the self. Processes indicative of a self-positivity bias are reflected in electroencephalogram (EEG) signals at ~400 ms when the task does not require a discrimination of self from other. However, when distinguishing between self-referential and other-referential emotions is required, previous studies have shown inconsistent temporal dynamics of EEG signals in slightly different tasks. Based on the observation of early self-other discrimination, we hypothesized that self would be rapidly activated in the early stage to modulate emotional processing in the late stage during an implicit self-referential emotion. To test this hypothesis, we employed an implicit task in which participants were asked to judge the order of Chinese characters of trait adjectives preceded by a self ("I") or other pronoun ("He" or "She"). This study aimed to explore the difference of social-related emotional evaluation from self-reference; the other pronoun was not defined to a specific person, rather it referred to the general concept. Sixteen healthy Chinese subjects participated in the experiment. Event-related potentials (ERPs) showed that there were self-other discrimination effects in the N1 (80-110 ms) and P1 (170-200 ms) components in the anterior brain. The emotional valence was discriminated in the later component of N2 (220-250 ms). The interaction between self-reference and emotional valence occurred during the late positive potential (LPP; 400-500 ms). Moreover, there was a positive correlation between response time (RT) and N1 in the self-reference condition based on the positive-negative contrast, suggesting a modulatory effect of the self-positivity bias. The results indicate that self-reference emerges earlier than emotion and then combines with emotional processing in an implicit task. The findings extend the view that the self plays a highly integrated and modulated role in self-referential emotion processing.Entities:
Keywords: ERP; emotion; other-reference; self; self-reference
Year: 2017 PMID: 28943845 PMCID: PMC5596083 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00451
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Detailed information about the affective personality trait words used in the task.
| List A | List B | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | Positive | Negative | |||
| Valence | 6.489 ± 0.461 | 3.221 ± 0.398 | <0.001 | 6.613 ± 0.349 | 3.359 ± 0.332 | <0.001 | 0.298 | 0.196 |
| Arousal | 4.849 ± 0.532 | 4.845 ± 0.511 | 0.991 | 4.594 ± 0.653 | 4.857 ± 0.689 | 0.182 | 0.146 | 0.955 |
| Familiarity | 5.402 ± 0.539 | 5.319 ± 0.442 | 0.561 | 5.489 ± 0.451 | 5.287 ± 0.382 | 0.102 | 0.547 | 0.794 |
Self-/other-reference and affective words were divided between Lists A and B, which were balanced in the dimensions of valence, arousal and familiarity.
Figure 1Implicit self-referential emotion task procedure (A) and the response times (RTs) in the experimental conditions (B). After a self-referential or non-self-referential pronoun word appeared, a positive or negative personality trait word was shown on the screen, and participants were asked to judge the order of the following character in the affective word. The black and gray bars indicate the self-reference and other-reference conditions respectively. The error bars are the standard errors in each condition. *p < 0.05.
Figure 2The self–other discrimination effects in the N1 (80–110 ms) and P1 (170–200 ms) components in the anterior region. (A) Displays the topological maps, and (B) shows the waveforms. LF, MF and RF indicate the left, middle and right anterior brain regions, respectively.
Figure 3The emotional valence effect in the P2 (230–260 ms) component in the anterior brain. (A) Displays the topological maps, and (B) shows the waveforms. LF, MF and RF indicate the left, middle and right anterior brain regions, respectively.
Figure 4The three-way interaction in the late positive potential (LPP; 400–500 ms) component in the anterior brain. (A) Displays the waveforms in the four conditions and (B) shows the average amplitudes in the LPP time-window. The solid lines show the positive emotion and the dashed lines show the negative emotion. self positive (SP), self negative (SN), other positive (OP), other negative (ON) indicate the conditions of self-referential positive emotion, self-referential negative emotion, other-referential positive emotion and other-referential negative emotion, respectively. The error bars are the standard errors in each condition. *p < 0.05.
Figure 5Individual-subject experimental effects in the anterior brain. (A,B) Display the self-reference effect in the components of N1 and P1, respectively. (C) Displays the emotional valence effect.
Figure 6The correlations between behavioral RT and N1. (A,B) Indicate the correlation between RT and N1 based on the emotional valence effect in the self- and other-referential conditions. P indicates the positive condition and N is for the negative condition. *p < 0.05, Bonferroni corrected.