White matter correlates of hemi-face dominance in happy and sad expression

The neural underpinnings of human emotional expression are thought to be unevenly distributed among the two brain hemispheres. However, little is known on the anatomy supporting this claim, particularly in the cerebral white matter. Here, we explored the relationship between hemi-face dominance in e...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain Structure and Function 2020-05, Vol.225 (4), p.1379-1388
Hauptverfasser: Ioannucci, Stefano, George, Nathalie, Friedrich, Patrick, Cerliani, Leonardo, Thiebaut de Schotten, Michel
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creator Ioannucci, Stefano
George, Nathalie
Friedrich, Patrick
Cerliani, Leonardo
Thiebaut de Schotten, Michel
description The neural underpinnings of human emotional expression are thought to be unevenly distributed among the two brain hemispheres. However, little is known on the anatomy supporting this claim, particularly in the cerebral white matter. Here, we explored the relationship between hemi-face dominance in emotional expression and cerebral white matter asymmetries in 33 healthy participants. Measures of emotional expression were derived from pictures of the participant’s faces in a ‘happy smiling’ and a ‘sad frowning’ conditions. Chimeric faces were constructed by mirroring right and left hemi-faces, as done in previous studies, resulting in a left mirrored and right mirrored chimeric face per picture. To gain measures of hemi-face dominance per participant, a jury of 20 additional participants rated which chimeric face shows the higher intensity of emotional expressivity, by marking a 155 mm line between the two versions. Measures of the asymmetry of the uncinate, the cingulum and the three branches of superior longitudinal fasciculi were derived from diffusion-weighted imaging tractography dissections. Group effect analyses indicated that the degree of asymmetry in emotional expression was not as prominent as reported in the literature and showed a large inter-individual variability. The degree of asymmetry in emotional expression was, however, significantly associated with the asymmetries in connective properties of the fronto-temporal and fronto-parietal tracts, specifically the uncinate fasciculus and the first branch of the superior longitudinal fasciculus. Therefore, this result raises novel hypotheses on the relationship of specific white matter tracts and emotional expression, especially their role in mood disorders.
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subjects Adult
Asymmetry
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biomedicine
Brain - anatomy & histology
Cell Biology
Cerebral hemispheres
Cingulum
Cognitive science
Diffusion Tensor Imaging
Dominance
Emotions
Face
Facial Expression
Facial Recognition - physiology
Female
Functional Laterality
Happiness
Hemispheric laterality
Humans
Life Sciences
Male
Mood
Neural Pathways - anatomy & histology
Neuroimaging
Neurology
Neurons and Cognition
Neuroscience
Neurosciences
Original Article
Psychology
Psychology and behavior
Sadness - physiology
Substantia alba
White Matter - anatomy & histology
title White matter correlates of hemi-face dominance in happy and sad expression
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