Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
921012 Biological Psychology 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Emotional stimuli capture and hold attention without explicit instruction. The late positive potential (LPP) component of the event related potential can be used to track motivated attention toward emotional stimuli, and is larger for emotional compared to neutral pictures. In the frequency domain, the steady state visual evoked potential (ssVEP) has also been used to track attention to stimuli flickering at a particular frequency. Like the LPP, the ssVEP is also larger for emotional compared to neutral pictures. Prior work suggests that both the LPP and ssVEP are sensitive to “top-down” manipulations of attention, however the LPP and ssVEP have not previously been examined using the same attentional manipulation in the same participants. In the present study, LPP and ssVEP amplitudes were simultaneously elicited by unpleasant and neutral pictures. Partway through picture presentation, participants’ attention was directed toward an arousing or non-arousing region of unpleasant pictures. In line with prior work, the LPP was reduced when attention was directed toward non-arousing compared to arousing regions of unpleasant pictures; similar results were observed for the ssVEP. Thus, both electrocortical measures index affective salience and are sensitive to directed (here: spatial) attention. Variation in the LPP and ssVEP was unrelated, suggesting that these measures are not redundant with each other and may capture different neurophysiological aspects of affective stimulus processing and attention.

► Simultaneously measured the late positive potential (LPP) and the steady state visual evoked potential (ssVEP) to unpleasant and neutral pictures. ► Both the LPP and ssVEP were larger for unpleasant than neutral pictures. ► The LPP and ssVEP were reduced when attention was directed to non-emotional aspects of unpleasant pictures. ► The impact of motivated and directed attention on the LPP and ssVEP were uncorrelated.

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