Non-voluntary and voluntary processing of emotional prosody: an event-related potentials study

The present study investigated whether event-related potentials (ERPs) reflect non-voluntary vs voluntary processing of emotional prosody. ERPs were obtained while participants processed emotional information non-voluntarily (i.e. while evaluating semantic characteristics of a stimulus) and voluntarily (i.e. while evaluating emotional characteristics of a stimulus). Results suggest that emotional prosody is processed around 160 ms after stimulus onset under non-voluntary processing conditions (when the attention is diverted from the emotional meaning of the tone of voice); and around 360 ms under voluntary processing conditions. The findings support the notion that emotional prosody is processed non-voluntarily in the comprehension of a spoken message.

[1]  Simon J Graham,et al.  An fMRI study investigating cognitive modulation of brain regions associated with emotional processing of visual stimuli , 2003, Neuropsychologia.

[2]  C K Friedrich,et al.  An electrophysiological response to different pitch contours in words , 2001, Neuroreport.

[3]  K. Zilles,et al.  Recognition of emotional prosody and verbal components of spoken language: an fMRI study. , 2000, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.

[4]  A. Beck,et al.  An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety: psychometric properties. , 1988, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[5]  Sakiko Yoshikawa,et al.  Emotional expression boosts early visual processing of the face: ERP recording and its decomposition by independent component analysis , 2001, Neuroreport.

[6]  M. Junghöfer,et al.  Attention and emotion: an ERP analysis of facilitated emotional stimulus processing , 2003, Neuroreport.

[7]  D. Regan Human brain electrophysiology: Evoked potentials and evoked magnetic fields in science and medicine , 1989 .

[8]  R. Dolan,et al.  Effects of Attention and Emotion on Face Processing in the Human Brain An Event-Related fMRI Study , 2001, Neuron.

[9]  H. Critchley,et al.  Explicit and implicit neural mechanisms for processing of social information from facial expressions: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study , 2000, Human brain mapping.

[10]  A. Beck,et al.  An inventory for measuring depression. , 1961, Archives of general psychiatry.

[11]  M. Bradley,et al.  Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW): Instruction Manual and Affective Ratings , 1999 .

[12]  H. Jasper,et al.  The ten-twenty electrode system of the International Federation. The International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. , 1999, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology. Supplement.

[13]  E. Donchin,et al.  Spatiotemporal analysis of the late ERP responses to deviant stimuli. , 2001, Psychophysiology.

[14]  D. Norris Shortlist: a connectionist model of continuous speech recognition , 1994, Cognition.

[15]  V S Johnston,et al.  The relationship between menstrual phase and the P3 component of ERPs. , 1991, Psychophysiology.

[16]  J. Gorman,et al.  Event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in schizophrenia for tonal and phonetic oddball tasks , 2001, Biological Psychiatry.

[17]  Irwin Pollack,et al.  Communication of Verbal Modes of Expression , 1960 .

[18]  E. Donchin Multivariate analysis of event-related potential data: A tutorial review , 1978 .