Automatic emotion regulation prompts response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinical depression: An ERP study

The neurocognitive mechanism by which automatic emotion regulation (AER) affects emotion processing remains understudied in the context of psychopathology, such as depression. Participants with sub-clinical depression and healthy controls were randomly assigned to an emotion regulation priming group...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biological psychology 2023-03, Vol.178, p.108515-108515, Article 108515
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Jing, Guan, Wanyao, Chen, Xinxin, Zhao, Yijia, Liu, Pan
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container_title Biological psychology
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creator Zhang, Jing
Guan, Wanyao
Chen, Xinxin
Zhao, Yijia
Liu, Pan
description The neurocognitive mechanism by which automatic emotion regulation (AER) affects emotion processing remains understudied in the context of psychopathology, such as depression. Participants with sub-clinical depression and healthy controls were randomly assigned to an emotion regulation priming group or a neutral priming group. All participants completed an emotional Go/No-go task by judging the gender of angry or happy faces. During the Go/No-go task, each trial was preceded by subliminal presentation of words describing emotion regulation goals or neutral goals as a manipulation of priming. The behavioral results showed that compared with neutral priming, subliminal priming of regulation goals increased the accuracy in No-go trials with angry faces only for sub-clinically depressed participants. In the ERP results, the main effect of regulation priming was significant in sub-clinically depressed participants, such that showing subliminal priming of regulation goals decreased the amplitude of N2 compared to the neutral priming. Similarly, for the sub-clinically depressed participants, regulation goal priming evoked smaller P3 in response to angry faces than to happy faces. No such pattern was found in neutral goal priming condition or for healthy controls. According to the automotive model of emotion regulation, once goals or norms related to emotion regulations are formed in the mind, a related regulation response could be activated without awareness. Our results suggest that subliminal priming of regulation goals could change the response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinically depressed participants. •Subliminal regulation goal priming increased accuracy of No-go angry in depression.•Decreased N2 in subliminal regulation goal priming condition reflected the effect of priming.•In subliminal regulation goal priming, angry faces had smaller P3 than happy faces for subclinical depression.
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Participants with sub-clinical depression and healthy controls were randomly assigned to an emotion regulation priming group or a neutral priming group. All participants completed an emotional Go/No-go task by judging the gender of angry or happy faces. During the Go/No-go task, each trial was preceded by subliminal presentation of words describing emotion regulation goals or neutral goals as a manipulation of priming. The behavioral results showed that compared with neutral priming, subliminal priming of regulation goals increased the accuracy in No-go trials with angry faces only for sub-clinically depressed participants. In the ERP results, the main effect of regulation priming was significant in sub-clinically depressed participants, such that showing subliminal priming of regulation goals decreased the amplitude of N2 compared to the neutral priming. Similarly, for the sub-clinically depressed participants, regulation goal priming evoked smaller P3 in response to angry faces than to happy faces. No such pattern was found in neutral goal priming condition or for healthy controls. According to the automotive model of emotion regulation, once goals or norms related to emotion regulations are formed in the mind, a related regulation response could be activated without awareness. Our results suggest that subliminal priming of regulation goals could change the response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinically depressed participants. •Subliminal regulation goal priming increased accuracy of No-go angry in depression.•Decreased N2 in subliminal regulation goal priming condition reflected the effect of priming.•In subliminal regulation goal priming, angry faces had smaller P3 than happy faces for subclinical depression.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0301-0511</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1873-6246</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108515</identifier><identifier>PMID: 36764597</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Netherlands: Elsevier B.V</publisher><subject>Anger - physiology ; Automatic emotion regulation ; Depression ; Electroencephalography - methods ; Emotional Regulation ; Emotions - physiology ; Evoked Potentials - physiology ; Facial Expression ; Go/No-go ; Humans ; Response inhibition ; Subclinical depression ; Subliminal priming</subject><ispartof>Biological psychology, 2023-03, Vol.178, p.108515-108515, Article 108515</ispartof><rights>2023</rights><rights>Copyright © 2023. 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Participants with sub-clinical depression and healthy controls were randomly assigned to an emotion regulation priming group or a neutral priming group. All participants completed an emotional Go/No-go task by judging the gender of angry or happy faces. During the Go/No-go task, each trial was preceded by subliminal presentation of words describing emotion regulation goals or neutral goals as a manipulation of priming. The behavioral results showed that compared with neutral priming, subliminal priming of regulation goals increased the accuracy in No-go trials with angry faces only for sub-clinically depressed participants. In the ERP results, the main effect of regulation priming was significant in sub-clinically depressed participants, such that showing subliminal priming of regulation goals decreased the amplitude of N2 compared to the neutral priming. Similarly, for the sub-clinically depressed participants, regulation goal priming evoked smaller P3 in response to angry faces than to happy faces. No such pattern was found in neutral goal priming condition or for healthy controls. According to the automotive model of emotion regulation, once goals or norms related to emotion regulations are formed in the mind, a related regulation response could be activated without awareness. 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Participants with sub-clinical depression and healthy controls were randomly assigned to an emotion regulation priming group or a neutral priming group. All participants completed an emotional Go/No-go task by judging the gender of angry or happy faces. During the Go/No-go task, each trial was preceded by subliminal presentation of words describing emotion regulation goals or neutral goals as a manipulation of priming. The behavioral results showed that compared with neutral priming, subliminal priming of regulation goals increased the accuracy in No-go trials with angry faces only for sub-clinically depressed participants. In the ERP results, the main effect of regulation priming was significant in sub-clinically depressed participants, such that showing subliminal priming of regulation goals decreased the amplitude of N2 compared to the neutral priming. Similarly, for the sub-clinically depressed participants, regulation goal priming evoked smaller P3 in response to angry faces than to happy faces. No such pattern was found in neutral goal priming condition or for healthy controls. According to the automotive model of emotion regulation, once goals or norms related to emotion regulations are formed in the mind, a related regulation response could be activated without awareness. Our results suggest that subliminal priming of regulation goals could change the response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinically depressed participants. •Subliminal regulation goal priming increased accuracy of No-go angry in depression.•Decreased N2 in subliminal regulation goal priming condition reflected the effect of priming.•In subliminal regulation goal priming, angry faces had smaller P3 than happy faces for subclinical depression.</abstract><cop>Netherlands</cop><pub>Elsevier B.V</pub><pmid>36764597</pmid><doi>10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108515</doi><tpages>1</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7583-9431</orcidid></addata></record>
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subjects Anger - physiology
Automatic emotion regulation
Depression
Electroencephalography - methods
Emotional Regulation
Emotions - physiology
Evoked Potentials - physiology
Facial Expression
Go/No-go
Humans
Response inhibition
Subclinical depression
Subliminal priming
title Automatic emotion regulation prompts response inhibition to angry faces in sub-clinical depression: An ERP study
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