Investigating the effect of respiratory bodily threat on the processing of emotional pictures

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Investigating the effect of respiratory bodily threat on the processing of emotional pictures. / Juravle, Georgiana; Stöckel, Cornelia; Rose, Michael; Gamer, Matthias; Büchel, Christian; Wieser, Matthias Johannes; von Leupoldt, Andreas.

In: RESP PHYSIOL NEUROBI, 27.05.2014.

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@article{8c98571b3cc64139b735790dfc450bf0,
title = "Investigating the effect of respiratory bodily threat on the processing of emotional pictures",
abstract = "It has been demonstrated that emotions can substantially impact the perception and neural processing of breathlessness, but little is known about the reverse interaction. Here, we examined the impact of breathlessness on emotional picture processing. The continuous EEG was recorded while volunteers viewed positive/neutral/negative emotional pictures under conditions of resistive-load-induced breathlessness, auditory noise, and an unloaded baseline. Breathlessness attenuated P1 and early posterior negativity (EPN) ERP amplitudes, irrespective of picture valence. Moreover, as expected, larger amplitudes for positive and negative pictures relative to neutral pictures were found for EPN and the late positive potential (LPP) ERPs, which were not affected by breathlessness. The results suggest that breathlessness impacts on the early attention-related neural processing of picture stimuli without influencing the later cognitive processing of emotional contents.",
author = "Georgiana Juravle and Cornelia St{\"o}ckel and Michael Rose and Matthias Gamer and Christian B{\"u}chel and Wieser, {Matthias Johannes} and {von Leupoldt}, Andreas",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.",
year = "2014",
month = may,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1016/j.resp.2014.05.007",
language = "English",
journal = "RESP PHYSIOL NEUROBI",
issn = "1569-9048",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigating the effect of respiratory bodily threat on the processing of emotional pictures

AU - Juravle, Georgiana

AU - Stöckel, Cornelia

AU - Rose, Michael

AU - Gamer, Matthias

AU - Büchel, Christian

AU - Wieser, Matthias Johannes

AU - von Leupoldt, Andreas

N1 - Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

PY - 2014/5/27

Y1 - 2014/5/27

N2 - It has been demonstrated that emotions can substantially impact the perception and neural processing of breathlessness, but little is known about the reverse interaction. Here, we examined the impact of breathlessness on emotional picture processing. The continuous EEG was recorded while volunteers viewed positive/neutral/negative emotional pictures under conditions of resistive-load-induced breathlessness, auditory noise, and an unloaded baseline. Breathlessness attenuated P1 and early posterior negativity (EPN) ERP amplitudes, irrespective of picture valence. Moreover, as expected, larger amplitudes for positive and negative pictures relative to neutral pictures were found for EPN and the late positive potential (LPP) ERPs, which were not affected by breathlessness. The results suggest that breathlessness impacts on the early attention-related neural processing of picture stimuli without influencing the later cognitive processing of emotional contents.

AB - It has been demonstrated that emotions can substantially impact the perception and neural processing of breathlessness, but little is known about the reverse interaction. Here, we examined the impact of breathlessness on emotional picture processing. The continuous EEG was recorded while volunteers viewed positive/neutral/negative emotional pictures under conditions of resistive-load-induced breathlessness, auditory noise, and an unloaded baseline. Breathlessness attenuated P1 and early posterior negativity (EPN) ERP amplitudes, irrespective of picture valence. Moreover, as expected, larger amplitudes for positive and negative pictures relative to neutral pictures were found for EPN and the late positive potential (LPP) ERPs, which were not affected by breathlessness. The results suggest that breathlessness impacts on the early attention-related neural processing of picture stimuli without influencing the later cognitive processing of emotional contents.

U2 - 10.1016/j.resp.2014.05.007

DO - 10.1016/j.resp.2014.05.007

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 24874555

JO - RESP PHYSIOL NEUROBI

JF - RESP PHYSIOL NEUROBI

SN - 1569-9048

ER -