Back to Search Start Over

Emotion and sex of facial stimuli modulate conditional automaticity in behavioral and neuronal interference in healthy men.

Authors :
Kohn, Nils
Fernández, Guillén
Source :
Neuropsychologia. Aug2020, Vol. 145, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Our surrounding provides a host of sensory input, which we cannot fully process without streamlining and automatic processing. Levels of automaticity differ for different cognitive and affective processes. Situational and contextual interactions between cognitive and affective processes in turn influence the level of automaticity. Automaticity can be measured by interference in Stroop tasks. We applied an emotional version of the Stroop task to investigate how stress as a contextual factor influences the affective valence-dependent level of automaticity. 120 young, healthy men were investigated for behavioral and brain interference following a stress induction or control procedure in a counter-balanced cross-over-design. Although Stroop interference was always observed, sex and emotion of the face strongly modulated interference, which was larger for fearful and male faces. These effects suggest higher automaticity when processing happy and also female faces. Supporting behavioral patterns, brain data show lower interference related brain activity in executive control related regions in response to happy and female faces. In the absence of behavioral stress effects, congruent compared to incongruent trials (reverse interference) showed little to no deactivation under stress in response to happy female and fearful male trials. These congruency effects are potentially based on altered context- stress-related facial processing that interact with sex-emotion stereotypes. Results indicate that sex and facial emotion modulate Stroop interference in brain and behavior. These effects can be explained by altered response difficulty as a consequence of the contextual and stereotype related modulation of automaticity. • We investigate the influence of stress on behavioral automaticity in a Stroop task. • Sex and emotion of facial stimuli are proposed to modulate automaticity. • Stress does not interact with behavioral automaticity, but sex and emotion affect it. • Sex and emotion influence task difficulty and brain activity related to executive control. • Decreased difficulty shows default mode like patterns, which interact with stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00283932
Volume :
145
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuropsychologia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146056815
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2017.12.001