scholarly journals Enhanced bodily states of fear facilitates bias perception of fearful faces

2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Won-Mo Jung ◽  
Ye-Seul Lee ◽  
In-Seon Lee ◽  
Christian Wallraven ◽  
Yeonhee Ryu ◽  
...  

AbstractWe investigated whether enhanced interoceptive bodily states of fear would facilitate recognition of the fearful faces. Participants performed an emotional judgment task after a bodily imagery task inside a functional magnetic resonance imaging scanner. In the bodily imagery task, participants were instructed to imagine feeling the bodily sensations of two specific somatotopic patterns: a fear-associated bodily sensation (FBS) or a disgust-associated bodily sensation (DBS). They were shown faces expressing various levels of fearfulness and disgust and instructed to classify the facial expression as fear or disgust. We found a stronger bias favoring the “fearful face” under the congruent FBS condition than under the incongruent DBS condition. The brain response to fearful versus intermediate faces increased in the fronto-insular-temporal network under the FBS condition, but not the DBS condition. The fearful face elicited activity in the anterior cingulate cortex and extrastriate body area under the FBS condition relative to the DBS condition. Furthermore, functional connectivity between the anterior cingulate cortex/extrastriate body area and the fronto-insular-temporal network was modulated according to the specific bodily sensation. Our findings suggest that somatotopic patterns of bodily sensation provide informative access to the collective visceral state in the fear processing via the fronto-insular-temporal network.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Anna Nicoletta Cruz Yu ◽  
Pierpaolo Iodice ◽  
Giovanni Pezzulo ◽  
Laura Barca

According to embodied theories, the processing of emotions such as happiness or fear is grounded in emotion-specific perceptual, bodily, and physiological processes. Under these views, perceiving an emotional stimulus (e.g., a fearful face) re-enacts interoceptive and bodily states congruent with that emotion (e.g., increases heart rate); and interoceptive and bodily changes (e.g., increases of heart rate) influence the processing of congruent emotional content. A previous study provides evidence for this embodied congruence, reporting that experimentally increasing heart rate with physical exercise facilitates the processing of facial expressions congruent with that interoception (fear), but not those conveying incongruent states (disgust or neutrality). Here, we investigate whether the above (bottom-up) interoceptive manipulation state interacts with the (top-down) priming of affective content, which is known to influence emotional processing as well. After rest or exercise, participants performed a gender-categorization task of happy, fearful, and neutral faces, which were preceded by positive, negative, and neutral primes. We hypothesized that if emotional processing is the result of an interoceptive inference that integrates (top-down) affective primes and (bottom-up) interoceptive streams, then positive and negative primes should facilitate the processing of happy and fearful faces, respectively, when participants have emotion-congruent bodily states (i.e., high heart rate). We found that negative priming facilitates the processing of fearful faces, over and above high heart rate. However, positive priming does not facilitate the processing of happy faces. While this asymmetry requires further investigation, our findings promisingly indicate that the processing of fearful faces integrates bottom-up interoceptive streams and top-down primes.


2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (S 1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M Mannerkoski ◽  
H Heiskala ◽  
K Van Leemput ◽  
L Åberg ◽  
R Raininko ◽  
...  

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