Mirabella Giovanni
Istituto Neurologico Mediterraneo (IRCCS), Pozzilli, Italy.
Department of Anatomy, Histology, Forensic Medicine and Orthopaedics, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2018 Aug 2;9:1334. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01334. eCollection 2018.
Modern theories of behavioral control converge with the idea that goal-directed/voluntary behaviors are intimately tied to the evaluation of resources. Of key relevance in the decision-making processes that underlie action selection are those stimuli that bear emotional content. However, even though it is acknowledged that emotional information affects behavioral control, the exact way in which emotions impact on action planning is largely unknown. To clarify this issue, I gave an emotional version of a go/no-go task to healthy participants, in which they had to perform the same arm reaching movement when pictures of fearful or happy faces were presented, and to withhold it when pictures of faces with neutral expressions were presented. This task allows for the investigation of the effects of emotional stimuli when they are task-relevant without conflating movement planning with target detection and task switching. It was found that both the reaction times (RTs) and the percentages of errors increased when the go-signal was the image of a fearful looking face, as opposed to when the go-signal was a happy looking face. Importantly, to control for the role of the features of the stimuli, I ran a control task in which the same pictures were shown; however, participants had to move/withhold the commanded movement according to gender, disregarding the emotional valence. In this context, the differences between RTs and error percentages between the fearful and happy faces disappeared. On the one hand, these results suggest that fearful facial stimuli are likely to capture and hold attention more strongly than faces that express happiness, which could serve to increase vigilance for detecting a potential threat in an observer's environment. On the other hand, they also suggest that the influence of fearful facial stimuli is not automatic, but it depends on the task requirements.
现代行为控制理论与这样一种观点相契合,即目标导向/自主行为与资源评估紧密相连。在构成行动选择基础的决策过程中,具有关键相关性的是那些带有情感内容的刺激因素。然而,尽管人们承认情感信息会影响行为控制,但情感影响行动规划的确切方式在很大程度上仍不为人知。为了阐明这个问题,我让健康参与者完成了一个情感版的“是/否”任务,在这个任务中,当呈现恐惧或开心的面部图片时,他们必须执行相同的伸手动作,而当呈现中性表情的面部图片时,则需抑制该动作。这个任务能够在不将动作规划与目标检测及任务切换相混淆的情况下,研究情感刺激在与任务相关时的影响。研究发现,当“执行”信号是一张看起来恐惧的脸的图片时,反应时间(RTs)和错误百分比都增加了,而当“执行”信号是一张看起来开心的脸的图片时则不然。重要的是,为了控制刺激特征的作用,我进行了一个对照任务,在该任务中展示相同的图片;然而,参与者必须根据性别来执行/抑制指令动作,而不考虑情感效价。在这种情况下,恐惧脸和开心脸之间反应时间和错误百分比的差异消失了。一方面,这些结果表明,恐惧的面部刺激可能比表达快乐的面部刺激更能强烈地吸引和保持注意力,这可能有助于提高观察者对其环境中潜在威胁的警惕性。另一方面,它们也表明,恐惧面部刺激的影响不是自动的,而是取决于任务要求。