Zhang Jin-Xiao, Dixon Matt L, Goldin Philippe R, Spiegel David, Gross James J
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA USA.
Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing, University of California Davis, Davis, CA USA.
Affect Sci. 2023 Dec 4;4(4):617-629. doi: 10.1007/s42761-023-00227-9. eCollection 2023 Dec.
One foundational distinction in affective science is between emotion reactivity and regulation. This conceptual distinction has long been assumed to be instantiated in spatially separable brain systems (a typical example: amygdala/insula for reactivity and frontoparietal areas for regulation). In this research, we begin by reviewing previous findings that support and contradict the neural separability hypothesis concerning emotional reactivity and regulation. Further, we conduct a direct test of this hypothesis with empirical data. In five studies involving healthy and clinical samples (total = 336), we assessed neural responses using fMRI while participants were asked to either react naturally or regulate their emotions (using reappraisal) while viewing emotionally evocative stimuli. Across five studies, we failed to find support for the neural separability hypothesis. In univariate analyses, both presumptive "reactivity" and "regulation" brain regions demonstrated equal or greater activation for the reactivity contrast than for the regulation contrast. In multivariate pattern analyses (MVPA), classifiers decoded reactivity (vs. neutral) trials more accurately than regulation (vs. reactivity) trials using multivoxel data in both presumptive "reactivity" and "regulation" regions. These findings suggest that emotion reactivity and regulation-as measured via fMRI-may not be as spatially separable in the brain as previously assumed. Our secondary whole-brain analyses revealed largely consistent results. We discuss the two theoretical possibilities regarding the neural separability hypothesis and offer thoughts for future research.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42761-023-00227-9.
情感科学中的一个基本区别在于情绪反应性和情绪调节。长期以来,人们一直认为这种概念上的区别体现在空间上可分离的脑系统中(一个典型例子:杏仁核/脑岛负责反应性,额顶叶区域负责调节)。在本研究中,我们首先回顾先前支持和反驳情绪反应性与调节的神经可分离性假说的研究结果。此外,我们用实证数据对这一假说进行了直接检验。在五项涉及健康和临床样本(总计 = 336)的研究中,我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)评估神经反应,同时要求参与者在观看情绪唤起刺激时自然反应或调节自己的情绪(使用重新评价策略)。在五项研究中,我们未能找到支持神经可分离性假说的证据。在单变量分析中,假定的“反应性”和“调节”脑区在反应性对比中的激活程度与调节对比相比相同或更高。在多变量模式分析(MVPA)中,分类器使用假定的“反应性”和“调节”区域中的多体素数据,在解码反应性(与中性)试验时比调节(与反应性)试验更准确。这些发现表明,通过fMRI测量的情绪反应性和调节在大脑中的空间可分离性可能不像先前假设的那样。我们的二级全脑分析得出了基本一致的结果。我们讨论了关于神经可分离性假说的两种理论可能性,并为未来研究提供了思路。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s42761-023-00227-9获取的补充材料。