Human Amygdala Response to Dynamic Facial Expressions of Positive and Negative Surprise

被引:37
|
作者
Vrticka, Pascal [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Lordier, Lara [2 ,3 ]
Bediou, Benoit [2 ,3 ]
Sander, David [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, Ctr Interdisciplinary Brain Sci Res, Dept Psychiat & Behav Sci, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
[2] Univ Geneva, Swiss Ctr Affect Sci, Geneva, Switzerland
[3] Univ Geneva, Lab Study Emot Elicitat & Express, Dept Psychol, FPSE, Geneva, Switzerland
关键词
amygdala; dynamic emotion; relevance; novelty; valence; fMRI; FUNCTIONAL NEUROANATOMY; GAZE DIRECTION; EMOTION; FEAR; PERCEPTION; VALENCE; SYSTEMS; THREAT; FMRI; METAANALYSIS;
D O I
10.1037/a0034619
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Although brain imaging evidence accumulates to suggest that the amygdala plays a key role in the processing of novel stimuli, only little is known about its role in processing expressed novelty conveyed by surprised faces, and even less about possible interactive encoding of novelty and valence. Those investigations that have already probed human amygdala involvement in the processing of surprised facial expressions either used static pictures displaying negative surprise (as contained in fear) or "neutral" surprise, and manipulated valence by contextually priming or subjectively associating static surprise with either negative or positive information. Therefore, it still remains unresolved how the human amygdala differentially processes dynamic surprised facial expressions displaying either positive or negative surprise. Here, we created new artificial dynamic 3-dimensional facial expressions conveying surprise with an intrinsic positive (wonderment) or negative (fear) connotation, but also intrinsic positive (joy) or negative (anxiety) emotions not containing any surprise, in addition to neutral facial displays either containing ("typical surprise" expression) or not containing ("neutral") surprise. Results showed heightened amygdala activity to faces containing positive (vs. negative) surprise, which may either correspond to a specific wonderment effect as such, or to the computation of a negative expected value prediction error. Findings are discussed in the light of data obtained from a closely matched nonsocial lottery task, which revealed overlapping activity within the left amygdala to unexpected positive outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 169
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Amygdala integrates emotional expression and gaze direction in response to dynamic facial expressions
    Sato, Wataru
    Kochiyama, Takanori
    Uono, Shota
    Yoshikawa, Sakiko
    NEUROIMAGE, 2010, 50 (04) : 1658 - 1665
  • [2] Amygdala activity in response to forward versus backward dynamic facial expressions
    Sato, Wataru
    Kochiyama, Takanori
    Yoshikawa, Sakiko
    BRAIN RESEARCH, 2010, 1315 : 92 - 99
  • [3] Amygdala response to facial expressions reflects emotional learning
    Hooker, Christine I.
    Germine, Laura T.
    Knight, Robert T.
    D'Esposito, Mark
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 26 (35) : 8915 - 8922
  • [4] Amygdala response to facial expressions in children and adults
    Thomas, KM
    Drevets, WC
    Whalen, PJ
    Eccard, CH
    Dahl, RE
    Ryan, ND
    Casey, BJ
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2001, 49 (04) : 309 - 316
  • [5] Feature-based representations of emotional facial expressions in the human amygdala
    Ahs, Fredrik
    Davis, Caroline F.
    Gorka, Adam X.
    Hariri, Ahmad R.
    SOCIAL COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 9 (09) : 1372 - 1378
  • [6] Amygdala activation at 3T in response to human and avatar facial expressions of emotions
    Moser, Ewald
    Derntl, Birgit
    Robinson, Simon
    Fink, Bernhard
    Gur, Ruben C.
    Grammer, Karl
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS, 2007, 161 (01) : 126 - 133
  • [7] Amygdalar activation associated with positive and negative facial expressions
    Yang, TT
    Menon, V
    Eliez, S
    Blasey, C
    White, CD
    Reid, AJ
    Gotlib, IH
    Reiss, AL
    NEUROREPORT, 2002, 13 (14) : 1737 - 1741
  • [8] Mothers' amygdala response to positive or negative infant affect is modulated by personal relevance
    Strathearn, Lane
    Kim, Sohye
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROSCIENCE, 2013, 7
  • [9] Beyond threat: Amygdala reactivity across multiple expressions of facial affect
    Fitzgerald, Daniel A.
    Angstadt, Mike
    Jelsone, Laura M.
    Nathan, Pradeep J.
    Phan, K. Luan
    NEUROIMAGE, 2006, 30 (04) : 1441 - 1448
  • [10] Surprise: unfolding of facial expressions
    Noordewier, Marret K.
    van Dijk, Eric
    COGNITION & EMOTION, 2019, 33 (05) : 915 - 930