Abstract

Cognitive control enables successful goal-directed behavior by resolving a conflict between opposing action tendencies, while emotional control arises as a consequence of emotional conflict processing such as in irony. While negative emotion facilitates both cognitive and emotional conflict processing, it is unclear how emotional conflict processing is affected by positive emotion (e.g., humor). In 2 EEG experiments, we investigated the role of positive audiovisual target stimuli in cognitive and emotional conflict processing. Participants categorized either spoken vowels (cognitive task) or their emotional valence (emotional task) and ignored the visual stimulus dimension. Behaviorally, a positive target showed no influence on cognitive conflict processing, but impeded emotional conflict processing. In the emotional task, response time conflict costs were higher for positive than for neutral targets. In the EEG, we observed an interaction of emotion by congruence in the P200 and N200 ERP components in emotional but not in cognitive conflict processing. In the emotional conflict task, the P200 and N200 conflict effect was larger for emotional than neutral targets. Thus, our results show that emotion affects conflict processing differently as a function of conflict type and emotional valence. This suggests that there are conflict- and valence-specific mechanisms modulating executive control.

Highlights

  • Cognitive control enables successful goal-directed behavior by resolving a conflict between opposing action tendencies, while emotional control arises as a consequence of emotional conflict processing such as in irony

  • The results indicated that negative targets lead to faster responses in both the cognitive and emotional tasks and to a conflict-specific modulation of the N100 component of the event-related potential (ERP)

  • We explored whether positive targets would facilitate cognitive conflict processing (Kanske & Kotz, 2011b; Xue et al, 2013), impede this process when the nontarget stimulus is positive (Blair et al, 2007; Dreisbach, 2006), or whether positive emotions would have no influence on cognitive conflict processing (Martin & Kerns, 2011)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cognitive control enables successful goal-directed behavior by resolving a conflict between opposing action tendencies, while emotional control arises as a consequence of emotional conflict processing such as in irony. It has been shown that cognitive conflict processing can be influenced by the emotional quality of a target stimulus (Kanske, 2012; Xue et al, 2013) Recent data extend this effect to emotional conflict processing (Zinchenko et al, 2015). The results indicated that negative targets lead to faster responses in both the cognitive and emotional tasks and to a conflict-specific modulation of the N100 component of the event-related potential (ERP). It is not clear, whether a positive target would lead to similar effects in cognitive and emotional conflict processing. The current study was designed to probe the influence of positive emotion on cognitive and emotional conflict processing

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
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