Abstract

Understanding animal emotions is an important scientific and ethical question but assessing emotional valence is still considered challenging. As the observation of lateralization (hemispheric asymmetries in structure and/or function) can provide insight into the underlying processes of the cognitive, physiological and behavioural components of emotions, it is a promising approach for studying them. The emotional valence hypothesis states that positive emotions are mostly processed by the left hemisphere, while negative emotions are mostly processed by the right hemisphere. Support for this hypothesis is still not conclusive; therefore, our study tested it in the context of visual laterality for viewing positive or negative emotionally conditioned stimuli. Ninety male piglets were either positively (food-reward) or negatively (mild punishment) conditioned to an object. Afterwards, the object was presented without the reinforcer under three different treatments: patch on the left or right eye (reducing input to the contralateral hemisphere) or patch between the eyes (the control). Monocular viewing had no clear effects on the negatively conditioned subjects. In contrast, in the positively conditioned group, covering the right eye caused a longer interruption of vocalization, a longer latency to touch the object, a shorter duration of exploring the arena and an increased vagal activity compared to the control. This suggests that reduced processing in the left hemisphere leads to heightened attention that is accompanied by a general orienting response, possibly resulting from a reduced positive appraisal. These findings therefore partially support the emotional valence hypothesis and suggest an important role of the left hemisphere in the quick recognition of a positive stimulus. This study demonstrated that investigating the lateralized processing of emotions can provide insight into the mechanisms of positive appraisal in animals.

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