The influence of context on the processing of emotional and neutral adjectives - An ERP study

被引:19
作者
Grzybowski, Szczepan J. [1 ]
Wyczesany, Miroslaw [1 ]
Kaiser, Jan [2 ]
机构
[1] Jagiellonian Univ, Inst Psychol, Psychophysiol Lab, PL-31120 Krakow, Poland
[2] Katowice Sch Econ, Inst Social Sci, Katowice, Poland
关键词
Positivity offset; Negativity bias; P1; P2; P3; N400; LPP; Word processing; Lateralization; Right hemisphere; EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS; BRAIN POTENTIALS; LEXICAL ACCESS; WORDS; RECOGNITION; ATTENTION; MOOD; LATERALIZATION; CATEGORIZATION; STARTLE;
D O I
10.1016/j.biopsycho.2014.01.002
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The study investigated brain responses to emotional and neutral adjectives within contexts of varying emotional valence. Participants were randomly assigned to 3 context groups where they viewed random sequences of emotional and neutral adjectives intermixed with: emotional pictures (emotional context), neutral pictures (neutral context) and blank screens (zero context). Within the emotional context group the P3 potential was more pronounced in response to positive than either negative or neutral adjectives, and positive picture context impacted positive and negative adjectives differently. In the neutral context group the P2 and P3 potentials were greater in response to the positive adjectives as compared to the neutral ones. There was also a greater negativity of the N400 potential in response to the neutral adjectives. Within the zero context group only the N400 effect was visible. The seeming preference for positive words can be explained in terms of the specific positivity offset phenomenon. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:137 / 149
页数:13
相关论文
共 65 条
[11]   Attitudes to the right: Evaluative processing is associated with lateralized late positive event-related brain potentials [J].
Cacioppo, JT ;
Crites, SL ;
Gardner, WL .
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 1996, 22 (12) :1205-1219
[12]   Processing of "unattended" threat-related information: Role of emotional content and context [J].
Calvo, Manuel G. ;
Dolores Castillo, M. ;
Fuentes, Luis J. .
COGNITION & EMOTION, 2006, 20 (08) :1049-1074
[13]   Neural correlates of written emotion word processing: A review of recent electrophysiological and hemodynamic neuroimaging studies [J].
Citron, Francesca M. M. .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2012, 122 (03) :211-226
[14]   Probing affective pictures: Attended startle and tone probes [J].
Cuthbert, BN ;
Schupp, HT ;
Bradley, M ;
McManis, M ;
Lang, PJ .
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1998, 35 (03) :344-347
[15]   Parametric analysis of event-related potentials in semantic comprehension: evidence for parallel brain mechanisms [J].
Dien, J ;
Frishkoff, GA ;
Cerbone, A ;
Tucker, DM .
COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 2003, 15 (02) :137-153
[16]   The neurocognitive basis of reading single words as seen through early latency ERPs: A model of converging pathways [J].
Dien, Joseph .
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2009, 80 (01) :10-22
[17]   Most people are happy [J].
Diener, E ;
Diener, C .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 1996, 7 (03) :181-185
[18]   On wildebeests and humans: The preferential detection of negative stimuli [J].
Dijksterhuis, A ;
Aarts, H .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2003, 14 (01) :14-18
[19]   Emotional Context Enhances Auditory Novelty Processing in Superior Temporal Gyrus [J].
Dominguez-Borras, Judith ;
Trautmann, Sina-Alexa ;
Erhard, Peter ;
Fehr, Thorsten ;
Herrmann, Manfred ;
Escera, Carles .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2009, 19 (07) :1521-1529
[20]   It's All About You: An ERP Study of Emotion and Self-Relevance in Discourse [J].
Fields, Eric C. ;
Kuperberg, Gina R. .
NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 62 (01) :562-574