Authors
Anna MV Gerlicher, Anouk M van Loon, H Steven Scholte, Victor AF Lamme, Andries R van der Leij
Publication date
2014/5/1
Journal
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Volume
9
Issue
5
Pages
610-614
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
In human social interactions, facial emotional expressions are a crucial source of information. Repeatedly presented information typically leads to an adaptation of neural responses. However, processing seems sustained with emotional facial expressions. Therefore, we tested whether sustained processing of emotional expressions, especially threat-related expressions, would attenuate neural adaptation. Neutral and emotional expressions (happy, mixed and fearful) of same and different identity were presented at 3 Hz. We used electroencephalography to record the evoked steady-state visual potentials (ssVEP) and tested to what extent the ssVEP amplitude adapts to the same when compared with different face identities. We found adaptation to the identity of a neutral face. However, for emotional faces, adaptation was reduced, decreasing linearly with negative valence, with the least adaptation to fearful …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AMV Gerlicher, AM van Loon, HS Scholte, VAF Lamme… - Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 2014