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If it bleeds, it leads: separating threat from mere negativity
- Source :
- Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. 10(1)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Most theories of emotion hold that negative stimuli are threatening and aversive. Yet in everyday experiences some negative sights (e.g. car wrecks) attract curiosity, whereas others repel (e.g. a weapon pointed in our face). To examine the diversity in negative stimuli, we employed four classes of visual images (Direct Threat, Indirect Threat, Merely Negative and Neutral) in a set of behavioral and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies. Participants reliably discriminated between the images, evaluating Direct Threat stimuli most quickly, and Merely Negative images most slowly. Threat images evoked greater and earlier blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) activations in the amygdala and periaqueductal gray, structures implicated in representing and responding to the motivational salience of stimuli. Conversely, the Merely Negative images evoked larger BOLD signal in the parahippocampal, retrosplenial, and medial prefrontal cortices, regions which have been implicated in contextual association processing. Ventrolateral as well as medial and lateral orbitofrontal cortices were activated by both threatening and Merely Negative images. In conclusion, negative visual stimuli can repel or attract scrutiny depending on their current threat potential, which is assessed by dynamic shifts in large-scale brain network activity.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
Visual perception
Cognitive Neuroscience
Emotions
Poison control
Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Amygdala
Periaqueductal gray
Arousal
Young Adult
Discrimination, Psychological
medicine
Humans
Valence (psychology)
Brain Mapping
Motivation
medicine.diagnostic_test
Brain
Negativity effect
General Medicine
Fear
Original Articles
Middle Aged
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Oxygen
Affect
medicine.anatomical_structure
Exploratory Behavior
Female
Psychology
Functional magnetic resonance imaging
Social psychology
Neuroscience
Photic Stimulation
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 17495024
- Volume :
- 10
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Social cognitive and affective neuroscience
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0d13f74f196c630543fc00fbda2f6c11