Abstract
The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) plays a key role in the modulation of affective processing. However, its specific role in the regulation of neurocognitive processes underlying the interplay of affective perception and visual awareness has remained largely unclear. Using a mixed factorial design, this study investigated effects of inhibitory continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) of the right DLPFC (rDLPFC) compared to an Active Control condition on behavioral (N = 48) and electroencephalographic (N = 38) correlates of affective processing in healthy Chinese participants. Event-related potentials (ERPs) in response to passively viewed subliminal and supraliminal negative and neutral natural scenes were recorded before and after cTBS application. We applied minimum-norm approaches to estimate the corresponding neuronal sources. On a behavioral level, we found evidence for reduced emotional interference by, and less negative and aroused ratings of negative supraliminal stimuli following rDLPFC inhibition. We found no evidence for stimulation effects on self-reported mood or the behavioral discrimination of subliminal stimuli. On a neurophysiological level, rDLPFC inhibition relatively enhanced occipito-parietal brain activity for both subliminal and supraliminal negative compared to neutral images (112–268 ms; 320–380 ms). The early onset and localization of these effects suggests that rDLPFC inhibition boosts automatic processes of “emotional attention” independently of visual awareness. Further, our study reveals the first available evidence for a differential influence of rDLPFC inhibition on subliminal versus supraliminal neural emotion processing. Explicitly, our findings indicate that rDLPFC inhibition selectively enhances late (292–360 ms) activity in response to supraliminal negative images. We tentatively suggest that this differential frontal activity likely reflects enhanced awareness-dependent down-regulation of negative scene processing, eventually leading to facilitated disengagement from and less negative and aroused evaluations of negative supraliminal stimuli.
Highlights
The human brain preferentially processes negative information, even if this information is presented in absence of visual awareness (e.g., Bayle et al, 2009; for an fMRI meta-analysis, see Meneguzzo et al, 2014)
We investigated how the processing of subliminal and supraliminal negative, withdrawal-associated stimuli is affected by right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) inhibition via transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
Post hoc analyses for the mid-latency cluster revealed that, following right DLPFC (rDLPFC) inhibition, negative compared to neutral images elicited an increase in amplitude from Pre-continuous theta-burst stimulation (cTBS) to Post-cTBS [F(1,36) = 10.730, p = 0.004]
Summary
The human brain preferentially processes negative information, even if this information is presented in absence of visual awareness (e.g., Bayle et al, 2009; for an fMRI meta-analysis, see Meneguzzo et al, 2014). Valence-specific characteristics of such inhibitory control processes might be influenced by hemispheric asymmetries in prefrontal brain functioning (Grimshaw and Carmel, 2014) Such asymmetries likely modulate withdrawal and approachrelated affect, whereby right hemispheric dominance has been linked to negative, withdrawal-related processing (for reviews, see Davidson, 1992a,b; Harmon-Jones et al, 2010; Grimshaw and Carmel, 2014)
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