Modality-specific brain representations during automatic processing of face, voice and body expressions

被引:2
|
作者
Vaessen, Maarten [1 ]
van der Heijden, Kiki [2 ]
de Gelder, Beatrice [3 ]
机构
[1] Zuyd Univ Appl Sci, Maastricht, Netherlands
[2] Radboud Univ Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Netherlands
[3] Maastricht Univ, Maastricht, Netherlands
基金
欧洲研究理事会; 欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
multisensory affect; faces; voices; bodies; emotion perception; facial expressions; voice; EMOTIONAL EXPRESSIONS; PATTERN-ANALYSIS; PERCEPTION; COMMON; INTEGRATION; RESPONSES; CORTEX; SCENES;
D O I
10.3389/fnins.2023.1132088
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
A central question in affective science and one that is relevant for its clinical applications is how emotions provided by different stimuli are experienced and represented in the brain. Following the traditional view emotional signals are recognized with the help of emotion concepts that are typically used in descriptions of mental states and emotional experiences, irrespective of the sensory modality. This perspective motivated the search for abstract representations of emotions in the brain, shared across variations in stimulus type (face, body, voice) and sensory origin (visual, auditory). On the other hand, emotion signals like for example an aggressive gesture, trigger rapid automatic behavioral responses and this may take place before or independently of full abstract representation of the emotion. This pleads in favor specific emotion signals that may trigger rapid adaptative behavior only by mobilizing modality and stimulus specific brain representations without relying on higher order abstract emotion categories. To test this hypothesis, we presented participants with naturalistic dynamic emotion expressions of the face, the whole body, or the voice in a functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) study. To focus on automatic emotion processing and sidestep explicit concept-based emotion recognition, participants performed an unrelated target detection task presented in a different sensory modality than the stimulus. By using multivariate analyses to assess neural activity patterns in response to the different stimulus types, we reveal a stimulus category and modality specific brain organization of affective signals. Our findings are consistent with the notion that under ecological conditions emotion expressions of the face, body and voice may have different functional roles in triggering rapid adaptive behavior, even if when viewed from an abstract conceptual vantage point, they may all exemplify the same emotion. This has implications for a neuroethologically grounded emotion research program that should start from detailed behavioral observations of how face, body, and voice expressions function in naturalistic contexts.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 47 条
  • [1] The activation of modality-specific representations during discourse processing
    Kurby, Christopher A.
    Zacks, Jeffrey M.
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2013, 126 (03) : 338 - 349
  • [2] Cortical gradients during naturalistic processing are hierarchical and modality-specific
    Samara, Ahmad
    Eilbottb, Jeffrey
    Margulies, Daniel S.
    Xud, Ting
    Vanderwal, Tamara
    NEUROIMAGE, 2023, 271
  • [3] Modality-general and modality-specific audiovisual valence processing
    Gao, Chuanji
    Shinkareva, Svetlana, V
    CORTEX, 2021, 138 : 127 - 137
  • [4] Processing of incongruent emotional expressions in voice and semantics: The dominant modality and integration with facial expressions
    Kikutani, Mariko
    Ikemoto, Machiko
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2025,
  • [5] A modality-specific dysfunction of pain processing in schizophrenia
    Zhou, Lili
    Bi, Yanzhi
    Liang, Meng
    Kong, Yazhuo
    Tu, Yiheng
    Zhang, Xiangyang
    Song, Yanying
    Du, Xia
    Tan, Shuping
    Hu, Li
    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2020, 41 (07) : 1738 - 1753
  • [6] Shared and modality-specific brain regions that mediate auditory and visual word comprehension
    Keitel, Anne
    Gross, Joachim
    Kayser, Christoph
    ELIFE, 2020, 9
  • [7] Subcortical, Modality-Specific Pathways Contribute to Multisensory Processing in Humans
    van den Brink, R. L.
    Cohen, M. X.
    van der Burg, E.
    Talsma, D.
    Vissers, M. E.
    Slagter, H. A.
    CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2014, 24 (08) : 2169 - 2177
  • [8] Modality-specific and modality-independent neural representations work in concert in predictive processes during sequence learning
    Vekony, Teodora
    Takacs, Adam
    Pedraza, Felipe
    Haesebaert, Frederic
    Tillmann, Barbara
    Mihalecz, Imola
    Phelipon, Romane
    Beste, Christian
    Nemeth, Dezso
    CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2023, 33 (12) : 7783 - 7796
  • [9] Representations of modality-specific affective processing for visual and auditory stimuli derived from functional magnetic resonance imaging data
    Shinkareva, Svetlana V.
    Wang, Jing
    Kim, Jongwan
    Facciani, Matthew J.
    Baucom, Laura B.
    Wedell, Douglas H.
    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2014, 35 (07) : 3558 - 3568
  • [10] Inside Speech: Multisensory and Modality-specific Processing of Tongue and Lip Speech Actions
    Treille, Avril
    Vilain, Coriandre
    Hueber, Thomas
    Lamalle, Laurent
    Sato, Marc
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 29 (03) : 448 - 466