It's All About You: An ERP Study of Emotion and Self-Relevance in Discourse

被引:125
作者
Fields, Eric C. [1 ]
Kuperberg, Gina R.
机构
[1] Tufts Univ, Dept Psychol, Medford, MA 02155 USA
关键词
Emotion; Event-related Potentials; Language; Late positive potential; Self-relevance; Perspective; NEGATIVITY BIAS; NEURAL MECHANISMS; VISUAL-ATTENTION; POSITIVITY BIAS; STROOP TASK; STIMULI; NAME; FACE; VALENCE; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2012.05.003
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Accurately communicating self-relevant and emotional information is a vital function of language, but we have little idea about how these factors impact normal discourse comprehension. In an event-related potential (ERP) study, we fully crossed self-relevance and emotion in a discourse context. Two-sentence social vignettes were presented either in the third or the second person (previous work has shown that this influences the perspective from which mental models are built). ERPs were time-locked to a critical word toward the end of the second sentence which was pleasant, neutral, or unpleasant (e.g., A man knocks on Sandra's/your hotel room door. She/You see(s) that he has a gift/tray/gun in his hand.). We saw modulation of early components (P1, N1, and P2) by self-relevance, suggesting that a self-relevant context can lead to top-down attentional effects during early stages of visual processing. Unpleasant words evoked a larger late positivity than pleasant words, which evoked a larger positivity than neutral words, indicating that, regardless of self-relevance, emotional words are assessed as motivationally significant, triggering additional or deeper processing at post-lexical stages. Finally, self-relevance and emotion interacted on the late positivity: a larger late positivity was evoked by neutral words in self-relevant, but not in non-self-relevant, contexts. This may reflect prolonged attempts to disambiguate the emotional valence of ambiguous stimuli that are relevant to the self. More broadly, our findings suggest that the assessment of emotion and self-relevance are not independent, but rather that they interactively influence one another during word-by-word language comprehension. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:562 / 574
页数:13
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