Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium; Institute of Psychology I, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
Department of Data Analysis, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
Neuroimage. 2013 Nov 1;81:81-95. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.04.115. Epub 2013 May 9.
Visual scene recognition is a proactive process through which contextual cues and top-down expectations facilitate the extraction of invariant features. Whether the emotional content of the scenes exerts a reliable influence on these processes or not, however, remains an open question. Here, topographic ERP mapping analysis and a distributed source localization method were used to characterize the electrophysiological correlates of proactive processes leading to scene recognition, as well as the potential modulation of these processes by memory and emotion. On each trial, the content of a complex neutral or emotional scene was progressively revealed, and participants were asked to decide whether this scene had previously been encountered or not (delayed match-to-sample task). Behavioral results showed earlier recognition for old compared to new scenes, as well as delayed recognition for emotional vs. neutral scenes. Electrophysiological results revealed that, ~400 ms following stimulus onset, activity in ventral object-selective regions increased linearly as a function of accumulation of perceptual evidence prior to recognition of old scenes. The emotional content of the scenes had an early influence in these areas. By comparison, at the same latency, the processing of new scenes was mostly achieved by dorsal and medial frontal brain areas, including the anterior cingulate cortex and the insula. In the latter region, emotion biased recognition at later stages, likely corresponding to decision making processes. These findings suggest that emotion can operate at distinct and multiple levels during proactive processes leading to scene recognition, depending on the extent of prior encounter with these scenes.
视觉场景识别是一个主动的过程,通过这个过程,上下文线索和自上而下的期望促进了不变特征的提取。然而,场景的情感内容是否对这些过程产生可靠的影响,仍然是一个悬而未决的问题。在这里,我们使用地形 ERP 映射分析和分布式源定位方法来描述导致场景识别的主动过程的电生理相关性,以及记忆和情绪对这些过程的潜在调节。在每次试验中,复杂的中性或情绪场景的内容逐渐被揭示,参与者被要求判断这个场景是否之前已经遇到过(延迟匹配样本任务)。行为结果表明,与新场景相比,旧场景的识别更快,而与中性场景相比,情绪场景的识别更慢。电生理结果表明,在刺激开始后约 400 毫秒,在旧场景识别之前, ventral 对象选择区域的活动随着感知证据的积累呈线性增加。场景的情感内容在这些区域中早期就产生了影响。相比之下,在相同的潜伏期,新场景的处理主要由背侧和内侧额区完成,包括前扣带皮层和脑岛。在后一区域,情绪在后期偏向于决策过程,从而影响识别。这些发现表明,情绪可以在主动过程中对场景识别产生多个不同水平的影响,具体取决于对这些场景的先前接触程度。