Event Abstract Back to Event Impaired Emotional Prosody Processing in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: An Event-Related Potential Study Jacqueline A. Rushby1*, Skye McDonald1, Francesca Froreich1, Alana Fisher1 and Jaimi Iredale1 1 University of New South Wales, Psychology, Australia Aims: Impaired communicative competence is well-documented among individuals with a severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). These impairments may in part result from a reduced perception of paralinguistic cues, such as emotional prosody which help inform judgments about another’s emotional state. This study used event-related potentials (ERPs) to examine the neural mechanisms of emotional prosody perception in TBI, within the framework of Schirmer and Kotz’s (2006) model of vocal emotion perception. Methods: Nineteen adults with severe TBI (15 male, age 46.1, education 12.5, average post-traumatic amnesia 66.78 days, average time post-injury 12.5 y), and 18 neurologically-healthy controls (11 males, age 43.9, education 15.4) completed a discrimination task which presented semantically-neutral word pairs from five prosody conditions (happy/happy, angry/angry, neutral/neutral, angry/happy, happy/angry); participants were required to judge the emotional prosody as the ‘same’ or ‘different’ whilst electroencephalogram and accuracy were recorded. Results: Preliminary analyses indicated that ERPs were larger in control compared with TBI participants, and were larger in central than lateral sites for both emotion categories compared with neutral, whereas the converse was found in TBI ,who showed a hemisphere > midline topography, but no topographical differentiation across frontal/posterior regions (F = 4.26, p = .046). This difference was also reflected in reduced accuracy for both emotion conditions for TBI group. Conclusions: TBI participants were not impaired in sensory processing of acoustic cues or recognition of emotional salience in acoustic cues. In regards to cognition and evaluative judgement however, TBI participants showed obvious differences in both ERP morphology, and behavioural outcomes, compared with controls. These findings are consistent with the frontal and posterior poles being more vulnerable to damage in TBI. Keywords: emotion, Prosody, ERP, Severe traumatic brain injury, Sensory Processing* Conference: ASP2013 - 23rd Annual meeting of the Australasian Society for Psychophysiology, Wollongong, Australia, 20 Nov - 22 Nov, 2013. Presentation Type: Oral Presentation Topic: Emotion Citation: Rushby JA, McDonald S, Froreich F, Fisher A and Iredale J (2013). Impaired Emotional Prosody Processing in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: An Event-Related Potential Study. Conference Abstract: ASP2013 - 23rd Annual meeting of the Australasian Society for Psychophysiology. doi: 10.3389/conf.fnhum.2013.213.00035 Copyright: The abstracts in this collection have not been subject to any Frontiers peer review or checks, and are not endorsed by Frontiers. They are made available through the Frontiers publishing platform as a service to conference organizers and presenters. The copyright in the individual abstracts is owned by the author of each abstract or his/her employer unless otherwise stated. Each abstract, as well as the collection of abstracts, are published under a Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 (attribution) licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) and may thus be reproduced, translated, adapted and be the subject of derivative works provided the authors and Frontiers are attributed. For Frontiers’ terms and conditions please see https://www.frontiersin.org/legal/terms-and-conditions. Received: 24 Oct 2013; Published Online: 05 Nov 2013. * Correspondence: Dr. Jacqueline A Rushby, University of New South Wales, Psychology, Randwick, NSW, 2031, Australia, j.rushby@unsw.edu.au Login Required This action requires you to be registered with Frontiers and logged in. To register or login click here. Abstract Info Abstract The Authors in Frontiers Jacqueline A Rushby Skye McDonald Francesca Froreich Alana Fisher Jaimi Iredale Google Jacqueline A Rushby Skye McDonald Francesca Froreich Alana Fisher Jaimi Iredale Google Scholar Jacqueline A Rushby Skye McDonald Francesca Froreich Alana Fisher Jaimi Iredale PubMed Jacqueline A Rushby Skye McDonald Francesca Froreich Alana Fisher Jaimi Iredale Related Article in Frontiers Google Scholar PubMed Abstract Close Back to top Javascript is disabled. Please enable Javascript in your browser settings in order to see all the content on this page.
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