Abstract

Results from recent event-related brain potential (ERP) studies investigating brain processes involved in the detection and analysis of emotional facial expression are reviewed. In all experiments, emotional faces were found to trigger an increased ERP positivity relative to neutral faces. The onset of this emotional expression effect was remarkably early, ranging from 120 to 180ms post-stimulus in different experiments where faces were either presented at fixation or laterally, and with or without non-face distractor stimuli. While broadly distributed positive deflections beyond 250ms post-stimulus have been found in previous studies for non-face stimuli, the early frontocentrally distributed phase of this emotional positivity is most likely face-specific. Similar emotional expression effects were found for six basic emotions, suggesting that these effects are not primarily generated within neural structures specialised for the automatic detection of specific emotions. Expression effects were eliminated when attention was directed away from the location of peripherally presented emotional faces, indicating that they are not linked to pre-attentive emotional processing. When foveal faces were unattended, expression effects were attenuated, but not completely eliminated. It is suggested that these ERP correlates of emotional face processing reflect activity within a neocortical system where representations of emotional content are generated in a task-dependent fashion for the adaptive intentional control of behaviour. Given the early onset of the emotion-specific effects reviewed here, it is likely that this system is activated in parallel with the ongoing evaluation of emotional content in the amygdala and related subcortical brain circuits.

Highlights

  • The investigation of emotional states, their neural correlates, and their role for the regulation of cognition and action is one of the most active research areas in cognitive neuroscience

  • A rapid evaluation of the emotional and motivational significance of facial expression appears to be mediated by the amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex, while structures such as the anterior cingulate, prefrontal cortex and somatosensory areas are linked to the conscious representation of emotional facial expression for the strategic control of thought and action, as well as to the production of concomitant feeling states

  • This paper reviews a series of recent studies in our lab that have used event-related brain potential (ERP) measures to investigate the processes involved in the detection and analysis of emotional facial expression

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Summary

Introduction

The investigation of emotional states, their neural correlates, and their role for the regulation of cognition and action is one of the most active research areas in cognitive neuroscience (see Adolphs, 2003; Dolan, 2002, for reviews). Many recent studies have investigated the neural network underlying emotional processing by measuring brain responses Holmes / Neuropsychologia 45 (2007) 15–31 emotional significance of facial expression, numerous recent functional imaging, lesion, and single-cell recording studies have used emotional faces to identify neural substrates of emotional processing.

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