Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2011 Apr 11;6(4):e18686. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018686.
Emotion and reward have been proposed to be closely linked to conscious experience, but empirical data are lacking. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a central role in the hedonic dimension of conscious experience; thus potentially a key region in interactions between emotion and consciousness. Here we tested the impact of emotion on conscious experience, and directly investigated the role of the ACC. We used a masked paradigm that measures conscious reportability in terms of subjective confidence and objective accuracy in identifying the briefly presented stimulus in a forced-choice test. By manipulating the emotional valence (positive, neutral, negative) and the presentation time (16 ms, 32 ms, 80 ms) we measured the impact of these variables on conscious and subliminal (i.e. below threshold) processing. First, we tested normal participants using face and word stimuli. Results showed that participants were more confident and accurate when consciously seeing happy versus sad/neutral faces and words. When stimuli were presented subliminally, we found no effect of emotion. To investigate the neural basis of this impact of emotion, we recorded local field potentials (LFPs) directly in the ACC in a chronic pain patient. Behavioural findings were replicated: the patient was more confident and accurate when (consciously) seeing happy versus sad faces, while no effect was seen in subliminal trials. Mirroring behavioural findings, we found significant differences in the LFPs after around 500 ms (lasting 30 ms) in conscious trials between happy and sad faces, while no effect was found in subliminal trials. We thus demonstrate a striking impact of emotion on conscious experience, with positive emotional stimuli enhancing conscious reportability. In line with previous studies, the data indicate a key role of the ACC, but goes beyond earlier work by providing the first direct evidence of interaction between emotion and conscious experience in the human ACC.
情绪和奖励被认为与意识体验密切相关,但缺乏经验数据。前扣带皮层(ACC)在意识体验的愉悦维度中起着核心作用;因此,它可能是情绪与意识相互作用的关键区域。在这里,我们测试了情绪对意识体验的影响,并直接研究了 ACC 的作用。我们使用了一种掩蔽范式,根据在强制选择测试中识别短暂呈现刺激的主观置信度和客观准确性来衡量意识的可报告性。通过操纵情绪效价(积极、中性、消极)和呈现时间(16ms、32ms、80ms),我们测量了这些变量对意识和潜意识(即低于阈值)处理的影响。首先,我们使用面孔和单词刺激来测试正常参与者。结果表明,当参与者有意识地看到快乐与悲伤/中性面孔和单词时,他们更有信心,也更准确。当刺激以潜意识呈现时,我们没有发现情绪的影响。为了研究这种情绪影响的神经基础,我们在一名慢性疼痛患者的 ACC 中直接记录了局部场电位(LFPs)。行为发现得到了复制:当(有意识地)看到快乐与悲伤的面孔时,患者更有信心,也更准确,而在潜意识试验中则没有这种影响。与行为发现相呼应,我们发现,在有意识的试验中,在大约 500ms(持续 30ms)后,快乐和悲伤的面孔之间的 LFPs 存在显著差异,而在潜意识试验中则没有这种差异。因此,我们证明了情绪对意识体验的显著影响,积极的情绪刺激增强了意识的可报告性。与之前的研究一致,这些数据表明 ACC 起着关键作用,但通过提供人类 ACC 中情绪与意识体验相互作用的第一个直接证据,超越了早期的工作。