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Decoding the neural responses to experiencing disgust and sadness

Authors :
Hans Revers
Katrijn Van Deun
Wim Strijbosch
Jean Vroomen
Marcel Bastiaansen
Leisure and Tourism Experiences
Academy for Leisure & Events
Cognitive Neuropsychology
Department of Methodology and Statistics
Source :
Brain Research, 2022. Elsevier, Brain Research, 1793:148034. Elsevier Science BV
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Being able to classify experienced emotions by identifying distinct neural responses has tremendous value in both fundamental research (e.g. positive psychology, emotion regulation theory) and in applied settings (clinical, healthcare, commercial). We aimed to decode the neural representation of the experience of two discrete emotions: sadness and disgust, devoid of differences in valence and arousal. In a passive viewing paradigm, we showed emotion evoking images from the International Affective Picture System to participants while recording their EEG. We then selected a subset of those images that were distinct in evoking either sadness or disgust (20 for each), yet were indistinguishable on normative valence and arousal. Event-related potential analysis of 69 participants showed differential responses in the N1 and EPN components and a support-vector machine classifier was able to accurately classify (58%) whole-brain EEG patterns of sadness and disgust experiences. These results support and expand on earlier findings that discrete emotions do have differential neural responses that are not caused by differences in valence or arousal.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068993
Volume :
1793
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd4a32c8e3a525573b7fc242d071492a