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2.
Biol Psychol ; 57(1-3): 153-77, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11454438

ABSTRACT

Two studies examined emotional responding to food cues. In experiment 1, normal college students were assigned to 0-, 6- or 24-h of food deprivation prior to presentations of standard emotional and food-related pictures. Food deprivation had no impact on responses elicited by standard emotional pictures. However, subjective and psychophysiological reactions to food pictures were affected significantly by deprivation. Importantly, food-deprived subjects viewing food pictures showed an enhanced startle reflex and increased heart rate. Experiment 2 replicated the food deprivation effects from experiment 1, and examined participants reporting either a habitual pattern of restrained (anorexia-like) or binge (bulimia-like) eating. Food-deprived and binge eater groups showed startle potentiation to food cues, and rated these stimuli as more pleasant, relative to restrained eaters and control subjects. The results are interpreted from the perspective that startle modulation reflects activation of defensive or appetitive motivation. Implications of the data for understanding eating disorders are considered.


Subject(s)
Anorexia Nervosa/physiopathology , Arousal/physiology , Bulimia/physiopathology , Cues , Emotions/physiology , Food Deprivation/physiology , Food , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Adult , Defense Mechanisms , Female , Humans , Male , Motivation , Psychophysiology
3.
Psychophysiology ; 38(2): 222-31, 2001 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11347868

ABSTRACT

Many studies have shown a consistent pattern in adults' responses to affective pictures and there is growing evidence of gender differences, as well. Little is known, though, about children's verbal, behavioral, and physiological responses to affective pictures. Two experiments investigated children's responses to pictures. In Experiment 1, children, adolescents, and adults viewed pictures varying in affective content and rated them for pleasure, arousal, and dominance. Results indicated that children and adolescents rated the pictures similarly to adults. In Experiment 2, physiological responses, self-report, and viewing time were measured while children viewed affective pictures. As with adults, children's responses reflected the affective content of the pictures. Gender differences in affective evaluations, corrugator activity, skin conductance, startle modulation, and viewing time indicated that girls were generally more reactive to unpleasant materials.


Subject(s)
Child Behavior/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Photic Stimulation
4.
Emotion ; 1(3): 276-98, 2001 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12934687

ABSTRACT

Emotional reactions are organized by underlying motivational states--defensive and appetitive--that have evolved to promote the survival of individuals and species. Affective responses were measured while participants viewed pictures with varied emotional and neutral content. Consistent with the motivational hypothesis, reports of the strongest emotional arousal, largest skin conductance responses, most pronounced cardiac deceleration, and greatest modulation of the startle reflex occurred when participants viewed pictures depicting threat, violent death, and erotica. Moreover, reflex modulation and conductance change varied with arousal, whereas facial patterns were content specific. The findings suggest that affective responses serve different functions-mobilization for action, attention, and social communication-and reflect the motivational system that is engaged, its intensity of activation, and the specific emotional context.


Subject(s)
Defense Mechanisms , Emotions , Intelligence , Motivation , Visual Perception , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Surveys and Questionnaires
5.
Psychophysiology ; 37(2): 257-61, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10731776

ABSTRACT

Recent studies have shown that the late positive component of the event-related-potential (ERP) is enhanced for emotional pictures, presented in an oddball paradigm, evaluated as distant from an established affective context. In other research, with context-free, random presentation, affectively intense pictures (pleasant and unpleasant) prompted similar enhanced ERP late positivity (compared with the neutral picture response). In an effort to reconcile interpretations of the late positive potential (LPP), ERPs to randomly ordered pictures were assessed, but using the faster presentation rate, brief exposure (1.5 s), and distinct sequences of six pictures, as in studies using an oddball based on evaluative distance. Again, results showed larger LPPs to pleasant and unpleasant pictures, compared with neutral pictures. Furthermore, affective pictures of high arousal elicited larger LPPs than less affectively intense pictures. The data support the view that late positivity to affective pictures is modulated both by their intrinsic motivational significance and the evaluative context of picture presentation.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Adult , Electroencephalography , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Motivation
6.
Biol Psychol ; 52(2): 95-111, 2000 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10699350

ABSTRACT

Emotionally arousing picture stimuli evoked scalp-recorded event-related potentials. A late, slow positive voltage change was observed, which was significantly larger for affective than neutral stimuli. This positive shift began 200-300 ms after picture onset, reached its maximum amplitude approximately 1 s after picture onset, and was sustained for most of a 6-s picture presentation period. The positive increase was not related to local probability of content type, but was accentuated for pictures that prompted increased autonomic responses and reports of greater affective arousal (e.g. erotic or violent content). These results suggest that the late positive wave indicates a selective processing of emotional stimuli, reflecting the activation of motivational systems in the brain.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Arousal/physiology , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Electroencephalography , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Adolescent , Adult , Attention/physiology , Cerebral Cortex/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Reaction Time/physiology , Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted
7.
Biol Psychiatry ; 44(12): 1248-63, 1998 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9861468

ABSTRACT

The organization of response systems in emotion is founded on two basic motive systems, appetitive and defensive. The subcortical and deep cortical structures that determine primary motivated behavior are similar across mammalian species. Animal research has illuminated these neural systems and defined their reflex outputs. Although motivated behavior is more complex and varied in humans, the simpler underlying response patterns persist in affective expression. These basic phenomena are elucidated here in the context of affective perception. Thus, the research examines human beings watching uniquely human stimuli--primarily picture media (but also words and sounds) that prompt emotional arousal--showing how the underlying motivational structure is apparent in the organization of visceral and behavioral responses, in the priming of simple reflexes, and in the reentrant processing of these symbolic representations in the sensory cortex. Implications of the work for understanding pathological emotional states are discussed, emphasizing research on psychopathy and the anxiety disorders.


Subject(s)
Anxiety Disorders/physiopathology , Brain/physiopathology , Emotions/physiology , Motivation , Animals , Anxiety Disorders/psychology , Anxiety Disorders/therapy , Fear/physiology , Humans , Imagery, Psychotherapy , Psychophysiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology
8.
Behav Neurosci ; 112(5): 1069-79, 1998 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9829785

ABSTRACT

This study investigated the size of, and relationship between, different modulatory effects of aversive stimulation on the acoustic startle reflex. This reflex is potentiated by shock exposure and associative shock conditioning (in animals and human volunteers) and unpleasant pictures (in human volunteers). In this study, dramatic sensitization of the probe-startle response was observed after shock exposure but not after a control task. Magnitude of sensitization was significantly larger than associative shock conditioning and picture modulation effects (also significant). Sensitization and conditioning scores showed modest, significant correlations with one another but not with picture modulation scores, consistent with animal data showing that partially overlapping brain mechanisms (i.e., amygdaloid-reticular projections) mediate these effects. The present results also indicate that sensitization of startle in human volunteers is a relatively more robust defensive response to aversive stimulation.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Association Learning/physiology , Avoidance Learning/physiology , Conditioning, Classical/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adolescent , Adult , Analysis of Variance , Animals , Electroshock , Fear/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Visual Perception
10.
Psychophysiology ; 35(3): 344-7, 1998 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9564755

ABSTRACT

Reflexive eyeblinks to a startle probe vary with the pleasantness of affective pictures, whereas the corresponding P300 varies with emotional arousal. The impact of attention to the probe on these effects was examined by varying task and probe type. Probes were either nonstartling tones or startling noises presented during affective picture viewing. Half the participants performed a task requiring attention to the probes; the other participants were told to ignore the probes. Blinks to the startle probe varied with picture pleasantness for both task and nontask conditions. In contrast, P300 magnitudes for both startle and tone probes were reduced during emotionally arousing pictures, irrespective of pleasantness, in task and nontask conditions. Further, attending to the startle probe prompted an augmentation of N100 during unpleasant pictures. The data suggest that affective modulation of probe responses reflects obligatory processes in picture perception.


Subject(s)
Affect/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Electroencephalography , Event-Related Potentials, P300/physiology , Female , Humans , Male , Visual Perception/physiology
11.
Psychophysiology ; 35(2): 199-210, 1998 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9529946

ABSTRACT

Functional activity in the visual cortex was assessed using functional magnetic resonance imaging technology while participants viewed a series of pleasant, neutral, or unpleasant pictures. Coronal images at four different locations in the occipital cortex were acquired during each of eight 12-s picture presentation periods (on) and 12-s interpicture interval (off). The extent of functional activation was larger in the right than the left hemisphere and larger in the occipital than in the occipitoparietal regions during processing of all picture contents compared with the interpicture intervals. More importantly, functional activity was significantly greater in all sampled brain regions when processing emotional (pleasant or unpleasant) pictures than when processing neutral stimuli. In Experiment 2, a hypothesis that these differences were an artifact of differential eye movements was ruled out. Whereas both emotional and neutral pictures produced activity centered on the calcarine fissure (Area 17), only emotional pictures also produced sizable clusters bilaterally in the occipital gyrus, in the right fusiform gyrus, and in the right inferior and superior parietal lobules.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Visual Cortex/physiology , Adult , Eye Movements/physiology , Female , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Sex Characteristics , Visual Cortex/anatomy & histology
12.
Psychophysiology ; 34(1): 1-6, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9009802

ABSTRACT

Two concurrent measures of the evoked startle response, the elicited blink reflex and the event-related potential, were measured while individuals viewed pictures that varied in pleasure and arousal. Replicating previous findings, the blink response was modulated by picture pleasantness, with larger reflexes elicited in the context of viewing unpleasant versus pleasant pictures. However, the probe P3 was primarily modulated by picture arousal, with smaller P3 responses elicited when viewing affective (pleasant or unpleasant) than when viewing neutral pictures. Both modulatory effects were sustained for probes presented in a subsequent picture imagery period. These data suggest that two measurable responses to the same startle probe are differentially modified by emotional context, with blink magnitude varying with pleasure and probe P3 varying with stimulus arousal.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Neuropsychological Tests
13.
Psychophysiology ; 34(1): 97-107, 1997 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9009813

ABSTRACT

The present study was designed to examine the pattern of startle reflex modulation and autonomic responses for individuals high in animal or blood-injury fear when viewing pictures of their feared objects. Sixteen individuals in each fear group and 16 low-fear control individuals viewed 32 color slides depicting fear-relevant, unpleasant but fear-unrelated, neutral, and pleasant scenes. Free viewing times were assessed in a second phase of the procedure as an index of avoidance behavior. Exposure to pictures of feared objects resulted in a consistent startle reflex potentiation and behavioral avoidance in both fear groups. This activation of the basic aversive system was independent of the autonomic pattern of the fear responses, which differed for the high-fear groups. These results suggest that the probe startle response indexes the organism's basic motivational disposition and add new information to the assessment of fear.


Subject(s)
Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Blinking/physiology , Fear/physiology , Form Perception/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans
14.
Psychophysiology ; 33(6): 662-70, 1996 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8961788

ABSTRACT

Pleasant, neutral, or unpleasant pictures were presented in a continuous series, and the effects of repetitive exposure to pictures of the same affective valence were assessed in somatic (corrugator electromyographic [EMG] activity) and visceral (heart rate and skin conductance) systems. Probe stimuli (startle or reaction time probes) were presented to index emotional and attentional concomitants of processing. Affective discrimination was maintained across time in all response systems, and sensitization was found for the corrugator EMG response. Responses to reaction time probes indexed differences in attentional allocation as a function of cognitive and affective variables in this paradigm. Taken together, the data suggest that presentation of a series of affective pictures of similar valence produces emotional reactions that are either maintained or sensitized across the temporal intervals used here but that do not habituate.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Form Perception/physiology , Adult , Attention/physiology , Electromyography , Female , Humans , Male , Neural Pathways/physiology
15.
Psychophysiology ; 33(2): 103-11, 1996 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8851238

ABSTRACT

When acoustic startle probes are presented during picture viewing, the blink reflex is augmented for unpleasant foreground stimuli and reduced during pleasant stimuli. The present experiment assessed the hypothesis that this affect-startle effect increases as pictures are judged to be more arousing. Eyeblinks elicited by startle probes of three different intensities were recorded while subjects viewed pictures varying in both pleasure (pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant) and arousal (low, moderate, and high). Both blink potentiation during unpleasant content and blink diminution during pleasant content were clearly strongest for picture contents high in arousal. The effect was present for all probe intensities tested.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Visual Perception/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Blinking/physiology , Female , Humans , Male
16.
Psychophysiology ; 33(2): 156-61, 1996 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8851243

ABSTRACT

Two experiments are reported in which affective modulation of the startle reflex elicited by monaurally presented acoustic probes was further examined. An earlier study in our laboratory obtained significant modulation by affect for probes presented to the left ear, but no significant effect for probes presented to the right ear. Experiment 1 replicated the procedures used in that experiment and obtained the same pattern of effects. Experiment 2 changed the presentation of monaural probes from a blocked to a mixed presentation and again obtained a similar pattern. Modulatory differences in reflex magnitude between pleasant and unpleasant stimuli were consistently large and reliable for reflexes elicited by left ear probes but weak and unreliable for reflexes elicited by right ear probes.


Subject(s)
Emotions/physiology , Functional Laterality/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Female , Humans , Male
17.
J Abnorm Psychol ; 103(3): 523-34, 1994 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7930052

ABSTRACT

We tested the hypothesis that the response mobilization that normally accompanies imagery of emotional situations is deficient in psychopaths. Cardiac, electrodermal, and facial muscle responses of 54 prisoners, assigned to low- and high-psychopathy groups using R. D. Hare's (1991) Psychopathy Checklist--Revised, were recorded while subjects imagined fearful and neutral scenes in a cued sentence-processing task. Groups did not differ on self-ratings of fearfulness, imagery ability, or imagery experience. Low-psychopathy subjects showed larger physiological reactions during fearful imagery than high-psychopathy subjects. Extreme scores on the antisocial behavior factor of psychopathy predicted imagery response deficits. Results are consistent with the idea that semantic and emotional processes are dissociated in psychopaths.


Subject(s)
Antisocial Personality Disorder/psychology , Cognition , Eidetic Imagery , Emotions , Fear , Prisoners/psychology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Antisocial Personality Disorder/diagnosis , Arousal , Galvanic Skin Response , Heart Rate , Humans , Impulsive Behavior/psychology , Language , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Self-Assessment , Semantics , Surveys and Questionnaires
18.
Behav Neurosci ; 107(6): 970-80, 1993 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8136072

ABSTRACT

Previous research with both animal and human subjects has shown that startle reflex magnitude is potentiated in an aversive stimulus context, relative to responses elicited in a neutral or appetitive context. In the present experiment, the same pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral picture stimuli were repeatedly presented to human subjects. Startle reflex habituation was assessed in each stimulus context and was compared with the habituation patterns of heart rate, electrodermal, and facial corrugator muscle responses. All systems showed initial differentiation among affective picture contents and general habituation over trials. The startle reflex alone, however, continued to differentiate among pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant pictures throughout the presentation series. These results suggest that (a) the startle probe reflex is relatively uninfluenced by stimulus novelty, (b) the startle modulatory circuit (identified with amygdala-reticular connections in animals) varies systematically with affective valence, and (c) the modulatory influence is less subject to habituation than is the obligatory startle pathway or responses in other somatic and autonomic systems.


Subject(s)
Arousal/physiology , Attention/physiology , Blinking/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Habituation, Psychophysiologic/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Adult , Autonomic Nervous System/physiology , Electromyography , Facial Expression , Facial Muscles/physiology , Female , Galvanic Skin Response/physiology , Heart Rate/physiology , Humans , Male , Motivation , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology
19.
Psychophysiology ; 30(5): 541-5, 1993 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8416082

ABSTRACT

The effects of an emotional stimulus prepulse on probe startle response were examined here. Pleasant, neutral and unpleasant pictures were viewed for 6 s, and an acoustic startle probe was presented either 300, 800, 1,300, or 3,800 ms after slide onset, or 300 or 3,800 ms after slide offset. Blink magnitude and onset latency demonstrated (a) an early (prepulse) inhibition effect in which reflexes elicited immediately after slide onset were smaller than reflexes elicited later in the viewing interval, and (b) affective modulation, in which unpleasant stimuli prompted larger reflexes than pleasant. Interactive effects of probe time and picture valence indicated attention/arousal effects early and pleasantness effects late in the picture interval. Effects of both attention and emotion can be simultaneously measured using this startle-probe paradigm, encouraging its use in both basic and clinical contexts.


Subject(s)
Attention/physiology , Emotions/physiology , Reflex, Startle/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Blinking/physiology , Female , Humans , Male
20.
J Abnorm Psychol ; 102(2): 212-25, 1993 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8315134

ABSTRACT

In a first study, phobic volunteer subjects (N = 60) reacted psychophysiologically with greater vigor to imagery of their own phobic content than to other fearful or nonaffective images. Imagery heart rate responses were largest in subjects with multiple phobias. For simple (dental) phobics, cardiac reactivity was positively correlated with reports of imagery vividness and concordant with reports of affective distress; these relationships were not observed for social (speech) phobics. In a second study, these phobic volunteers were shown to be similar on most measures to an outpatient clinically phobic sample. In an analysis of the combined samples, fearful and socially anxious subtypes were defined by questionnaires. Only the fearful subtype showed a significant covariation among physiological responses, imagery vividness, and severity of phobic disorder. This fearful-anxious distinction seems to cut across diagnostic categories, providing a heuristic perspective from which to view anxiety disorders.


Subject(s)
Anxiety , Fear , Imagination , Phobic Disorders/psychology , Adult , Dental Anxiety , Humans , Male , Speech
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