Abstract

Automatic emotion regulation (AER) is an important type of emotion regulation in our daily life. Most of the previous studies concerning AER are done in the conscious level. Little is known about the AER under the subliminal level. The present study was to investigate the AER at the different perceptual levels (i.e., explicitly and implicitly) simultaneously, and the associated neural differences using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Priming paradigm was adopted in which the inhibition or neutral words were used as primes and the negative picutres were used as targets. In the experiment, the duration time of priming words was manipulated at 33 or 50 ms in the implicit level and 3000 ms in the explicit level. The participants were required to make emotional valence rating of the negative pictures while undergoing functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning. The results showed that the participants experienced less negative emotion in inhibition words priming condition contrary to neutral words priming condition. Significant differences were also found in the left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex at the implicit and explicit AER. The findings of this study demonstrate that inhibition words can automatically and effectively reduce an individual’s negative emotion experience, and left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex have been both implicated in self-control during AER.

Highlights

  • Automatic emotion regulation (AER) is one of the most common types of emotion regulation in our daily life

  • The findings of this study demonstrate that inhibition words can automatically and effectively reduce an individual’s negative emotion experience, and left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex have been both implicated in self-control during AER

  • This study aimed at two specific research questions: Can inhibition word effectively prime AER, and what differences may there be in the activation of certain brain regions between the implicit and explicit perceptual levels during AER

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Automatic emotion regulation (AER) is one of the most common types of emotion regulation in our daily life. According to Mauss et al (2007), AER is a goal-driven change to any aspect of one’s emotions without making a conscious decision to do so, without paying attention to the process of regulating one’s emotions, and without engaging in deliberate control. It is noted that in the current neuroscientific research literature, there are different experimental paradigms employed to provide empirical evidence for the earlier model These experimental paradigms consist of the emotional conflict paradigm (Etkin, Egner, Peraza, Kandel, & Hirsch, 2006; Haas, Omura, Constable, & Canli, 2006), the emotion regulation by implementation intentions (Hallam et al, 2015), and the affect labeling paradigm (Lieberman et al, 2007). While Lieberman et al (2007) suggested that emotion regulation in affect labeling paradigm (e.g., participants were instructed to decide whether the facial expression was angry or happy) is implicit, it might be the mPFC-amygdala pathway that plays a critical role in emotion regulation process

Objectives
Methods
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call