| Literature DB >> 31024278 |
Xin Hu1, Chu Zhuang1, Fei Wang1, Yong-Jin Liu2, Chang-Hwan Im3, Dan Zhang1.
Abstract
The behavioral differentiation of positive emotions has recently been studied in terms of their discrete adaptive functions or appraising profiles. Some preliminary neurophysiological evidences have been found with electroencephalography or autonomic nervous system measurements such as heart rate, skin conductance, etc. However, the brain's hemodynamic responses to different positive emotions remain largely unknown. In the present study, the functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) technique was employed. With this tool, we for the first time reported recognizable discrete positive emotions using fNIRS signals. Thirteen participants watched 30 emotional video clips to elicit 10 typical kinds of positive emotions (joy, gratitude, serenity, interest, hope, pride, amusement, inspiration, awe, and love), and their frontal neural activities were simultaneously recorded with a 24-channel fNIRS system. The multidimensional scaling analysis of participants' subjective ratings on these 10 positive emotions revealed three distinct clusters, which could be interpreted as "playfulness" for amusement, joy, interest, "encouragement" for awe, gratitude, hope, inspiration, pride, and "harmony" for love, serenity. Hemodynamic responses to these three positive emotion clusters showed distinct patterns, and HbO-based individual-level binary classifications between them achieved an averaged accuracy of 73.79 ± 11.49% (77.56 ± 7.39% for encouragement vs. harmony, 73.29 ± 11.87% for playfulness vs. harmony, 70.51 ± 13.96% for encouragement vs. harmony). Benefited from fNIRS's high portability, low running cost and the relative robustness against motion and electrical artifacts, our findings provided support for implementing a more fine-grained emotion recognition system with subdivided positive emotion categories.Entities:
Keywords: classification; deoxy-hemoglobin; fNIRS; oxy-hemoglobin; positive emotion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31024278 PMCID: PMC6465574 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2019.00120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
FIGURE 1(A) Schematic illustration of the fNIRS probe layout. (B) The topographical distribution of the fNIRS recording channels.
FIGURE 2Basic information of emotion ratings. Participants’ ratings on the 10 positive emotional experience items. For each emotion category of film clips, the 10 bars indicate the mean ratings of these clips on amusement, awe, gratitude, hope, inspiration, interest, joy, love, pride, and serenity (from left to right). The bars in yellow show the ratings on the corresponding target emotion; The bars in blue mean their ratings significantly lower than those of the target emotion (post hoc paired t-tests p < 0.05, FDR corrected); The bars in gray indicate ratings NOT significantly different from those of the target emotion (p > 0.05, FDR corrected).
Pairwise correlation coefficients between the 14 emotion items.
| Amusement | Awe | Gratitude | Hope | Inspiration | Interest | Joy | Love | Pride | Serenity | Arousal | Valence | Familiarity | Liking | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amusement | – | |||||||||||||
| Awe | −0.48∗∗ | – | ||||||||||||
| Gratitude | −0.05 | 0.56∗∗ | – | |||||||||||
| Hope | 0.12 | 0.44∗∗ | 0.94∗∗ | – | ||||||||||
| Inspiration | 0.27 | 0.47∗∗ | 0.87∗∗ | 0.94 ∗∗ | – | |||||||||
| Interest | 0.81∗∗ | −0.05 | 0.36∗ | 0.51∗∗ | 0.66∗∗ | – | ||||||||
| Joy | 0.88∗∗ | −0.23 | 0.31∗ | 0.48∗∗ | 0.60∗∗ | 0.92∗∗ | – | |||||||
| Love | 0.14 | −0.14 | 0.51∗∗ | 0.59∗∗ | 0.41∗∗ | 0.26 | 0.38∗ | – | ||||||
| Pride | 0.03 | 0.62∗∗ | 0.85∗∗ | 0.83∗∗ | 0.89∗∗ | 0.45∗∗ | 0.41∗∗ | 0.34∗ | – | |||||
| Serenity | −0.20 | 0.30 | 0.50∗∗ | 0.46∗∗ | 0.30 | 0.11 | 0.06 | 0.45∗∗ | 0.37∗ | – | ||||
| Arousal | 0.62∗∗ | −0.02 | 0.09 | 0.19 | 0.42∗∗ | 0.56∗∗ | 0.58∗∗ | −0.11 | 0.31 | −0.56∗∗ | – | |||
| Valence | 0.63∗∗ | 0.07 | 0.68∗∗ | 0.79∗∗ | 0.85∗∗ | 0.85∗∗ | 0.86∗∗ | 0.50∗∗ | 0.68∗∗ | 0.31∗ | 0.42∗∗ | – | ||
| Familiarity | 0.43∗∗ | 0.02 | 0.33∗ | 0.41∗∗ | 0.53∗∗ | 0.51∗∗ | 0.53∗∗ | −0.02 | 0.48∗∗ | −0.02 | 0.50∗∗ | 0.58 ∗∗ | – | |
| Liking | 0.69∗∗ | 0.06 | 0.59∗∗ | 0.71∗∗ | 0.81∗∗ | 0.92∗∗ | 0.89∗∗ | 0.41∗∗ | 0.64∗∗ | 0.20 | 0.53∗∗ | 0.94∗∗ | 0.58∗∗ | – |
FIGURE 3Multidimensional scaling (MDS) space of 10 positive emotions. The MDS space shows the similarity of the 10 positive emotions, based on the participants’ subjective ratings.
FIGURE 4Correlations between emotion scores and HbO/HbR responses.
HbO-based binary classification accuracies between negative emotion and each positive emotion cluster.
| Participant | Accuracy (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative vs. Cluster 1 | Negative vs. Cluster 2 | Negative vs. Cluster 3 | |
| 1 | 69.44 | 86.11 | 77.78 |
| 2 | 86.11 | 91.67 | 88.89 |
| 3 | 86.11 | 72.22 | 72.22 |
| 4 | 91.67 | 94.44 | 97.22 |
| 5 | 97.22 | 63.89 | 83.33 |
| 6 | 75.00 | 66.67 | 94.44 |
| 7 | 91.67 | 77.78 | 80.56 |
| 8 | 72.22 | 83.33 | 94.44 |
| 9 | 72.22 | 91.67 | 75.00 |
| 10 | 86.11 | 94.44 | 97.22 |
| 11 | 86.11 | 88.89 | 91.67 |
| 12 | 83.33 | 80.56 | 83.33 |
| 13 | 86.11 | 80.56 | 72.22 |
| Mean | 83.33 ± 8.56 | 82.48 ± 10.17 | 85.26 ± 9.31 |
HbR-based binary classification accuracies between negative emotion and each positive emotion cluster.
| Participant | Accuracy (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Negative vs. Cluster 1 | Negative vs. Cluster 2 | Negative vs. Cluster 3 | |
| 1 | 80.56 | 77.78 | 80.56 |
| 2 | 63.89 | 91.67 | 75.00 |
| 3 | 97.22 | 86.11 | 72.22 |
| 4 | 75.00 | 77.78 | 66.67 |
| 5 | 83.33 | 83.33 | 80.56 |
| 6 | 86.11 | 69.44 | 63.89 |
| 7 | 91.67 | 75.00 | 91.67 |
| 8 | 69.44 | 77.78 | 80.56 |
| 9 | 75 | 80.56 | 63.89 |
| 10 | 91.67 | 91.67 | 91.67 |
| 11 | 86.11 | 86.11 | 94.44 |
| 12 | 72.22 | 69.44 | 66.67 |
| 13 | 72.22 | 77.78 | 66.67 |
| Mean | 80.34 ± 9.98 | 80.34 ± 7.21 | 76.50 ± 11.03 |
HbO-based binary classification accuracies within three positive emotion clusters.
| Participant | Accuracy (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 vs. Cluster 2 | Cluster 2 vs. Cluster3 | Cluster 1 vs. Cluster 3 | |
| 1 | 75.00 | 63.89 | 66.67 |
| 2 | 75.00 | 86.11 | 75.00 |
| 3 | 83.33 | 69.44 | 77.78 |
| 4 | 83.33 | 55.56 | 86.11 |
| 5 | 80.56 | 69.44 | 86.11 |
| 6 | 77.78 | 66.67 | 50.00 |
| 7 | 88.89 | 86.11 | 80.56 |
| 8 | 66.67 | 69.44 | 58.33 |
| 9 | 83.33 | 80.56 | 58.33 |
| 10 | 83.33 | 88.89 | 75.00 |
| 11 | 69.44 | 83.33 | 72.22 |
| 12 | 77.78 | 80.56 | 86.11 |
| 13 | 63.89 | 52.78 | 44.44 |
| Mean | 77.56 ± 7.39 | 73.29 ± 11.87 | 70.51 ± 13.96 |
HbR-based binary classification accuracies within three positive emotion clusters.
| Participant | Accuracy (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster 1 vs. Cluster 2 | Cluster 2 vs. Cluster3 | Cluster 1 vs. Cluster 3 | |
| 1 | 58.33 | 47.22 | 50.00 |
| 2 | 77.78 | 77.78 | 66.67 |
| 3 | 91.67 | 63.89 | 72.22 |
| 4 | 80.56 | 41.67 | 61.11 |
| 5 | 75.00 | 63.89 | 80.56 |
| 6 | 75.00 | 55.56 | 58.33 |
| 7 | 88.89 | 75.00 | 72.22 |
| 8 | 77.78 | 77.78 | 41.67 |
| 9 | 66.67 | 66.67 | 38.89 |
| 10 | 80.56 | 80.56 | 63.89 |
| 11 | 66.67 | 72.22 | 75.00 |
| 12 | 69.44 | 69.44 | 63.89 |
| 13 | 61.11 | 47.22 | 50.00 |
| Mean | 74.57 ± 9.94 | 64.53 ± 12.94 | 61.11 ± 12.88 |