Aversive picture processing: effects of a concurrent task on sustained defensive system engagement.

Viewing a series of aversive pictures prompts emotional reactivity reflecting sustained defensive engagement. The present study examined the effects of a concurrent visual task on autonomic, somatic, electrocortical, and facial components of this defensive state. Results indicated that emotional activation was largely preserved despite continuous visual distraction, although evidence of attenuation was observed in startle reflex and electrocortical measures. Concurrent task-specific reactivity was also apparent, suggesting that motivational circuits can be simultaneously activated by stimuli with intrinsic survival significance and instructed task significance and that these processes interact differently across the separate components of defensive engagement.

[1]  M. Bradley,et al.  Emotion and the motivational brain , 2010, Biological Psychology.

[2]  Kevin N. Ochsner,et al.  The Neural Bases of Distraction and Reappraisal , 2010, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[3]  Sander L. Koole,et al.  Tuning down the emotional brain: An fMRI study of the effects of cognitive load on the processing of affective images , 2009, NeuroImage.

[4]  M. Bradley Natural selective attention: orienting and emotion. , 2009, Psychophysiology.

[5]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  Handbook Of Psychophysiology , 2019 .

[6]  Dan Foti,et al.  Neural response to emotional pictures is unaffected by concurrent task difficulty: an event-related potential study. , 2007, Behavioral neuroscience.

[7]  Bruce W. Smith,et al.  Modulation of emotion by cognition and cognition by emotion , 2007, NeuroImage.

[8]  J. Cacioppo,et al.  The skeletomotor system: Surface electromyography. , 2007 .

[9]  Markus Junghöfer,et al.  Explicit attention interferes with selective emotion processing in human extrastriate cortex , 2007, BMC Neuroscience.

[10]  P. Lang,et al.  Emotion, motivation, and the brain: reflex foundations in animal and human research. , 2006, Progress in brain research.

[11]  Peter J. Lang,et al.  State anxiety and affective physiology: effects of sustained exposure to affective pictures , 2005, Biological Psychology.

[12]  J. Gross,et al.  The cognitive control of emotion , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[13]  P. Lang International affective picture system (IAPS) : affective ratings of pictures and instruction manual , 2005 .

[14]  B. Rypma,et al.  Autonomic Physiological Activity in Mental Rotation Tasks , 1999, Perceptual and motor skills.

[15]  R. Desimone Visual attention mediated by biased competition in extrastriate visual cortex. , 1998, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[16]  M. Bradley,et al.  Picture media and emotion: effects of a sustained affective context. , 1996, Psychophysiology.

[17]  A. J. Fridlund,et al.  Guidelines for human electromyographic research. , 1986, Psychophysiology.