4.4 Article

Up close and emotional: Electrophysiological dynamics of approaching angry faces

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 176, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2022.108479

Keywords

P1; N170; Looming; Face; Inversion; Anger; Emotion; Motion

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Recent evidence suggests that the neural system processes looming emotional faces rapidly, and this process is further influenced by emotions, leading to enhanced neural response for angry expressions. In this study, upright and inverted angry and neutral faces were presented to participants, while the faces appeared to approach or retreat from the viewer. EEG/ERP measures were used to identify the time course of brain activity for these stimuli. The results showed that upright angry faces led to enhanced brain activity, specifically in the P1 and N170 components, and the P1 response was further increased with looming angry faces. However, the inversion of the faces resulted in increased amplitudes for both the P1 and N170, but without any modulation of emotions. These findings suggest that the early modulation of brain activity for upright looming angry faces is not due to low-level visual features.
Recent evidence suggests that looming emotional faces are processed rapidly by the neural system, and that this apparent approach further interacts with emotion, causing an enhanced neural response for angry expressions. However, previous research has not demonstrated unequivocally if these effects are due to low-level visual features, or if they are indeed due to the emotional content of the stimuli. To address this question, the current study presented upright and inverted angry and neutral faces, which either expanded or contracted in size on a constant depth-cued background, such that they appeared to approach or retreat from the viewer. EEG/ERP measures were used to identify the time course of brain activity for these stimuli. The results showed that when faces were upright, both the P1 and N170 were enhanced for angry expressions, with the P1 being further increased with looming angry faces. The inversion of the faces caused an increase in both the P1 and N170 amplitudes, but no modulation was found for emotions. These findings show an early modulation of brain ac-tivity for upright looming angry faces and rule out the influence of low-level visual features as a contributing factor.

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