Novelty and emotion: Pupillary and cortical responses during viewing of natural scenes

•The LPP and pupil were co-registered during free-viewing of natural scenes.•The LPP was larger when novel pictures depicted emotional vs. neutral content.•The pupil size was larger when novel pictures depicted emotional vs. neutral content.•The affective modulation of the LPP was preserved with mas...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychology 2016-01, Vol.113, p.75-82
Hauptverfasser: Ferrari, Vera, De Cesarei, Andrea, Mastria, Serena, Lugli, Luisa, Baroni, Giulia, Nicoletti, Roberto, Codispoti, Maurizio
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container_end_page 82
container_issue
container_start_page 75
container_title Biological psychology
container_volume 113
creator Ferrari, Vera
De Cesarei, Andrea
Mastria, Serena
Lugli, Luisa
Baroni, Giulia
Nicoletti, Roberto
Codispoti, Maurizio
description •The LPP and pupil were co-registered during free-viewing of natural scenes.•The LPP was larger when novel pictures depicted emotional vs. neutral content.•The pupil size was larger when novel pictures depicted emotional vs. neutral content.•The affective modulation of the LPP was preserved with massed repetition.•The affective modulation of the pupil diameter habituated with massed repetition. Given the remarkable similarities in the antecedent conditions—stimulus motivational relevance and novelty (i.e., probability of occurrence)—that elicit amplitude modulation of the late positive potential (LPP) and the pupillary dilation response, the present study examines whether these two indexes of orienting response reflect common processes that are responsible for modulatory patterns in motivationally relevant contexts. In the present study, the LPP and the pupillary dilation response were co-registered in a free-picture viewing context in which stimulus novelty was manipulated through repeated presentation of the same picture exemplar. More specifically, pictures depicting both emotional and neutral contents could be novel, that is never seen before in the course of the study, or repeated 4–8 times in a row (i.e., massed repetition). Results showed that, despite massed repetitions, the late positive potential amplitude continued to be highly modulated by picture content, whereas affective modulation of pupil dilation decreased with picture repetition. These findings indicate that, although the LPP and pupil dilation are similarly affected by motivational relevance during the viewing of novel pictures, they differ when pictures are highly familiar, possibly reflecting different functional meanings in the context of the orienting response.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2015.11.008
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Given the remarkable similarities in the antecedent conditions—stimulus motivational relevance and novelty (i.e., probability of occurrence)—that elicit amplitude modulation of the late positive potential (LPP) and the pupillary dilation response, the present study examines whether these two indexes of orienting response reflect common processes that are responsible for modulatory patterns in motivationally relevant contexts. In the present study, the LPP and the pupillary dilation response were co-registered in a free-picture viewing context in which stimulus novelty was manipulated through repeated presentation of the same picture exemplar. More specifically, pictures depicting both emotional and neutral contents could be novel, that is never seen before in the course of the study, or repeated 4–8 times in a row (i.e., massed repetition). 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Given the remarkable similarities in the antecedent conditions—stimulus motivational relevance and novelty (i.e., probability of occurrence)—that elicit amplitude modulation of the late positive potential (LPP) and the pupillary dilation response, the present study examines whether these two indexes of orienting response reflect common processes that are responsible for modulatory patterns in motivationally relevant contexts. In the present study, the LPP and the pupillary dilation response were co-registered in a free-picture viewing context in which stimulus novelty was manipulated through repeated presentation of the same picture exemplar. More specifically, pictures depicting both emotional and neutral contents could be novel, that is never seen before in the course of the study, or repeated 4–8 times in a row (i.e., massed repetition). 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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Electroencephalography
Emotion
Emotions - physiology
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Female
Humans
Late positive potential
Male
Motivation
Orientation - physiology
Parietal Lobe - physiology
Photic Stimulation
Pupil - physiology
Pupil response
Reflex, Pupillary - physiology
Repetition
Young Adult
title Novelty and emotion: Pupillary and cortical responses during viewing of natural scenes
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