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Emotional scenes elicit more pronounced self-reported emotional experience and greater EPN and LPP modulation when compared to emotional faces
Authors:Nathaniel Thom  Justin Knight  Rod Dishman  Dean Sabatinelli  Douglas C Johnson  Brett Clementz
Institution:1. Department of Applied Health Science, Wheaton College, Wheaton, IL, 60187, USA
5. Leidos Corporation, Reston, VA, 20190, USA
2. Department of Psychology, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA
6. Biomedical and Health Science Institute, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA
3. Department of Exercise Science, The University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA
4. Department of Psychiatry, The University of California - San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract:Emotional faces and scenes carry a wealth of overlapping and distinct perceptual information. Despite widespread use in the investigation of emotional perception, expressive face and evocative scene stimuli are rarely assessed in the same experiment. Here, we evaluated self-reports of arousal and pleasantness, as well as early and late event-related potentials (e.g., N170, early posterior negativity EPN], late positive potential LPP]) as subjects viewed neutral and emotional faces and scenes, including contents representing anger, fear, and joy. Results demonstrate that emotional scenes were rated as more evocative than emotional faces, as only scenes produced elevated self-reports of arousal. In addition, viewing scenes resulted in more extreme ratings of pleasantness (and unpleasantness) than did faces. EEG results indicate that both expressive faces and emotional scenes evoke enhanced negativity in the N170 component, while the EPN and LPP components show significantly enhanced modulation only by scene, relative to face stimuli. These data suggest that viewing emotional scenes results in a more pronounced emotional experience that is associated with reliable modulation of visual event-related potentials that are implicated in emotional circuits in the brain.
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