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Decoding the temporal dynamics of affective scene processingopen access

Authors
Bo, KeCui, LihanYin, SiyangHu, ZhenhongHong, XiangfeiKim, SungkeanKeil, AndreasDing, Mingzhou
Issue Date
Nov-2022
Publisher
Academic Press
Keywords
Emotion, affective scenes; IAPS; Multivariate pattern analysis; EEG; fMRI; Representation similarity analysis; Visual cortex
Citation
NeuroImage, v.261, pp 1 - 14
Pages
14
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NeuroImage
Volume
261
Start Page
1
End Page
14
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/111444
DOI
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119532
ISSN
1053-8119
1095-9572
Abstract
Natural images containing affective scenes are used extensively to investigate the neural mechanisms of visual emotion processing. Functional fMRI studies have shown that these images activate a large-scale distributed brain network that encompasses areas in visual, temporal, and frontal cortices. The underlying spatial and temporal dynamics, however, remain to be better characterized. We recorded simultaneous EEG-fMRI data while participants passively viewed affective images from the International Affective Picture System (IAPS). Applying multivariate pattern analysis to decode EEG data, and representational similarity analysis to fuse EEG data with simultaneously recorded fMRI data, we found that: (1) similar to 80 ms after picture onset, perceptual processing of complex visual scenes began in early visual cortex, proceeding to ventral visual cortex at similar to 100 ms, (2) between similar to 200 and similar to 300 ms (pleasant pictures: similar to 200 ms; unpleasant pictures: similar to 260 ms), affect-specific neural representations began to form, supported mainly by areas in occipital and temporal cortices, and (3) affect-specific neural representations were stable, lasting up to similar to 2 s, and exhibited temporally generalizable activity patterns. These results suggest that affective scene representations in the brain are formed temporally in a valence-dependent manner and may be sustained by recurrent neural interactions among distributed brain areas.
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