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Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces

According to embodied theories, the processing of emotions such as happiness or fear is grounded in emotion-specific perceptual, bodily, and physiological processes. Under these views, perceiving an emotional stimulus (e.g., a fearful face) re-enacts interoceptive and bodily states congruent with th...

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Autores principales: Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz, Iodice, Pierpaolo, Pezzulo, Giovanni, Barca, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8206275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34149514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.625986
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author Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Pezzulo, Giovanni
Barca, Laura
author_facet Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Pezzulo, Giovanni
Barca, Laura
author_sort Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz
collection PubMed
description According to embodied theories, the processing of emotions such as happiness or fear is grounded in emotion-specific perceptual, bodily, and physiological processes. Under these views, perceiving an emotional stimulus (e.g., a fearful face) re-enacts interoceptive and bodily states congruent with that emotion (e.g., increases heart rate); and in turn, interoceptive and bodily changes (e.g., increases of heart rate) influence the processing of congruent emotional content. A previous study by Pezzulo et al. (2018) provided evidence for this embodied congruence, reporting that experimentally increasing heart rate with physical exercise facilitated the processing of facial expressions congruent with that interoception (fear), but not those conveying incongruent states (disgust or neutrality). Here, we investigated whether the above (bottom-up) interoceptive manipulation and the (top-down) priming of affective content may jointly influence the processing of happy and fearful faces. The fact that happiness and fear are both associated with high heart rate but have different (positive and negative) valence permits testing the hypothesis that their processing might be facilitated by the same interoceptive manipulation (the increase of heart rate) but two opposite (positive and negative) affective primes. To test this hypothesis, we asked participants to perform a gender-categorization task of happy, fearful, and neutral faces, which were preceded by positive, negative, and neutral primes. Participants performed the same task in two sessions (after rest, with normal heart rate, or exercise, with faster heart rate) and we recorded their response times and mouse movements during the choices. We replicated the finding that when participants were in the exercise condition, they processed fearful faces faster than when they were in the rest condition. However, we did not find the same reduction in response time for happy (or neutral) faces. Furthermore, we found that when participants were in the exercise condition, they processed fearful faces faster in the presence of negative compared to positive or neutral primes; but we found no equivalent facilitation of positive (or neutral) primes during the processing of happy (or neutral) faces. While the asymmetries between the processing of fearful and happy faces require further investigation, our findings promisingly indicate that the processing of fearful faces is jointly influenced by both bottom-up interoceptive states and top-down affective primes that are congruent with the emotion.
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spelling pubmed-82062752021-06-17 Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz Iodice, Pierpaolo Pezzulo, Giovanni Barca, Laura Front Psychol Psychology According to embodied theories, the processing of emotions such as happiness or fear is grounded in emotion-specific perceptual, bodily, and physiological processes. Under these views, perceiving an emotional stimulus (e.g., a fearful face) re-enacts interoceptive and bodily states congruent with that emotion (e.g., increases heart rate); and in turn, interoceptive and bodily changes (e.g., increases of heart rate) influence the processing of congruent emotional content. A previous study by Pezzulo et al. (2018) provided evidence for this embodied congruence, reporting that experimentally increasing heart rate with physical exercise facilitated the processing of facial expressions congruent with that interoception (fear), but not those conveying incongruent states (disgust or neutrality). Here, we investigated whether the above (bottom-up) interoceptive manipulation and the (top-down) priming of affective content may jointly influence the processing of happy and fearful faces. The fact that happiness and fear are both associated with high heart rate but have different (positive and negative) valence permits testing the hypothesis that their processing might be facilitated by the same interoceptive manipulation (the increase of heart rate) but two opposite (positive and negative) affective primes. To test this hypothesis, we asked participants to perform a gender-categorization task of happy, fearful, and neutral faces, which were preceded by positive, negative, and neutral primes. Participants performed the same task in two sessions (after rest, with normal heart rate, or exercise, with faster heart rate) and we recorded their response times and mouse movements during the choices. We replicated the finding that when participants were in the exercise condition, they processed fearful faces faster than when they were in the rest condition. However, we did not find the same reduction in response time for happy (or neutral) faces. Furthermore, we found that when participants were in the exercise condition, they processed fearful faces faster in the presence of negative compared to positive or neutral primes; but we found no equivalent facilitation of positive (or neutral) primes during the processing of happy (or neutral) faces. While the asymmetries between the processing of fearful and happy faces require further investigation, our findings promisingly indicate that the processing of fearful faces is jointly influenced by both bottom-up interoceptive states and top-down affective primes that are congruent with the emotion. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8206275/ /pubmed/34149514 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.625986 Text en Copyright © 2021 Yu, Iodice, Pezzulo and Barca. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Yu, Alessandra Nicoletta Cruz
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Pezzulo, Giovanni
Barca, Laura
Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title_full Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title_fullStr Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title_full_unstemmed Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title_short Bodily Information and Top-Down Affective Priming Jointly Affect the Processing of Fearful Faces
title_sort bodily information and top-down affective priming jointly affect the processing of fearful faces
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8206275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34149514
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.625986
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