Title of article
Affective ERP processing in a visual oddball task: Arousal, valence, and gender
Author/Authors
Bella Rozenkrants، نويسنده , , John Polich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
6
From page
2260
To page
2265
Abstract
Objective
To assess affective event-related brain potentials (ERPs) using visual pictures that were highly distinct on arousal level/valence category ratings and a response task.
Methods
Images from the International Affective Pictures System (IAPS) were selected to obtain distinct affective arousal (low, high) and valence (negative, positive) rating levels. The pictures were used as target stimuli in an oddball paradigm, with a visual pattern as the standard stimulus. Participants were instructed to press a button whenever a picture occurred and to ignore the standard. Task performance and response time did not differ across conditions.
Results
High-arousal compared to low-arousal stimuli produced larger amplitudes for the N2, P3, early slow wave, and late slow wave components. Valence amplitude effects were weak overall and originated primarily from the later waveform components and interactions with electrode position. Gender differences were negligible.
Conclusion
The findings suggest that arousal level is the primary determinant of affective oddball processing, and valence minimally influences ERP amplitude.
Significance
Affective processing engages selective attentional mechanisms that are primarily sensitive to the arousal properties of emotional stimuli. The application and nature of task demands are important considerations for interpreting these effects.
Keywords
International Affective Picture SystemIAPSEvent-related potentials (ERPs)P300ValenceArousalGender
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Record number
524859
Link To Document