4.6 Article

Mutual influence between emotional language and inhibitory control processes. Evidence from an event-related potential study

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.13743

Keywords

EEG; emotion; language; response inhibition

Funding

  1. Spanish MINECO [PSI2015-66277-R, RTI2018-098730-B-I00]
  2. Cabildo Insular de Tenerife
  3. COP of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria
  4. European Regional Development Funds

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examined bidirectional interactions between emotional language and inhibitory processes, revealing that setting an inhibition state modulates the processing of negatively charged emotional stimuli. The results suggest a mutual facilitation between inhibitory control and negative valence, supporting recent integrative theories of cognition-emotion interactions.
There is abundant literature demonstrating that processing emotional stimuli modulates inhibitory control processes. However, the reverse effects, namely, how cognitive inhibition influences the processing of emotional stimuli, have been considerably neglected. This ERP study tries to fill this gap by studying the bidirectional interactions between emotional language and inhibitory processes. To this end, participants read emotional sentences, embedded in a cue-based Go-NoGo task. In Experiment 1, the critical emotional adjective preceded the Go-NoGo visual cue. The ERPs showed a significant reduction in the inhibition-related N2 component in NoGo trials when they were preceded by negative adjectives, compared to positive or neutral adjectives, indicating a priming-like effect on inhibitory control. Consistently, the estimated source of this interaction was the dorsomedial PFC, a region associated with inhibitory and control processes. In Experiment 2, the Go-NoGo cue preceded the emotional adjective, and the ERPs showed a sustained, broadly distributed LPP-like positivity for NoGo negative trials, relative to all the other conditions. In this case, the presetting of an inhibition state modulated the processing of negatively charged words. Together, the two experiments suggest a mutual facilitation between inhibitory control and negative valence, supporting thereby recent integrative theories of cognition-emotion interactions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available