Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience Advance Access originally published online on August 24, 2007
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience 2007 2(4):323-333; doi:10.1093/scan/nsm026
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Happy and fearful emotion in cues and targets modulate event-related potential indices of gaze-directed attentional orienting
1Department of Psychology and 2Department of Psychiatry, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06510, 3Department of Psychology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 4Department of Psychology, Texas State University at San Marcos, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA and, 5Center for Cognitive Neuroscience and Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of valence in facial cues and object targets on event-related potential (ERPs) indices of gaze-directed orienting. Participants were shown faces at fixation that concurrently displayed dynamic gaze shifts and expression changes from neutral to fearful or happy emotions. Emotionally-salient target objects subsequently appeared in the periphery and were spatially congruent or incongruent with the gaze direction. ERPs were time-locked to target presentation. Three sequential ERP components were modulated by happy emotion, indicating a progression from an expression effect to a gaze-by-expression interaction to a target emotion effect. These effects included larger P1 amplitude over contralateral occipital sites for targets following happy faces, larger centrally distributed N1 amplitude for targets following happy faces with leftward gaze, and faster P3 latency for positive targets. In addition, parietally distributed P3 amplitude was reduced for validly cued targets following fearful expressions. Results are consistent with accounts of attentional broadening and motivational approach by happy emotion, and facilitation of spatially directed attention in the presence of fearful cues. The findings have implications for understanding how socioemotional signals in faces interact with each other and with emotional features of objects in the environment to alter attentional processes.
Keywords: facial affect; positive psychology; evoked potentials; shared attention; social neuroscience
Correspondence should be addressed to Kevin S. LaBar, PhD, Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Box 90999 Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA. E-mail: klabar{at}duke.edu.
Received May 9, 2007. Accepted May 14, 2007.