4.6 Article

Effects of respiratory phases on the processing of emotional and non-emotional visual stimuli

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14261

Keywords

cardiac phase; event-related potentials; nasal respiration; respiratory phase; visual discrimination accuracy

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This study examined the effect of respiratory and cardiac phases on the discrimination accuracy of emotional and non-emotional visual stimuli. The results showed that fear discrimination accuracy was higher during inhalation and systole, but contrast discrimination was not affected. These findings suggest that natural nasal inhalation facilitates the discrimination of emotional stimuli, possibly through subcortical processes.
The number of studies investigating the relationship between respiratory phases and cognitive/neural processing of external events has been increasing, but the findings remain controversial. This registered report examined the effect of the respiratory phase on the discrimination accuracy of visual stimuli in the emotional and non-emotional domains. Forty-two healthy young participants were asked to choose fearful over neutral facial expressions and to choose high-contrast over low-contrast Gabor patches during spontaneous nasal respiration. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were also recorded for each type of stimulus presented during each respiratory phase. It was hypothesized that discrimination accuracy would be higher when the stimuli were presented during inhalation than during exhalation. It was also hypothesized that the amplitudes of ERPs elicited by the stimuli would be greater during inhalation than during exhalation. For comparison, the effect of the cardiac phase was examined, with the expectation that discrimination accuracy would be higher when the stimuli were presented during systole than during diastole. It was also hypothesized that the amplitudes of ERPs elicited by the stimuli would be greater during systole than during diastole. As expected, the results indicated that fear discrimination accuracy was higher during inhalation than exhalation and during systole than diastole. However, this was not the case for contrast discrimination. No differences in ERPs were observed between respiratory phases in either task. These results suggest that natural breathing in through the nose facilitates the discrimination of emotional stimuli, possibly via subcortical processes.

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