Sustained happiness? Lack of repetition suppression in right-ventral visual cortex for happy faces
Author(s) -
Atsunobu Suzuki,
Joshua Oon Soo Goh,
Andrew Hebrank,
Bradley P. Sutton,
Lucas J. Jenkins,
Blair Flicker,
Denise C. Park
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
social cognitive and affective neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.229
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1749-5024
pISSN - 1749-5016
DOI - 10.1093/scan/nsq058
Subject(s) - psychology , stimulus (psychology) , happiness , fusiform face area , functional magnetic resonance imaging , repetition (rhetorical device) , visual processing , neural correlates of consciousness , facial expression , neuroscience , face perception , cognitive psychology , audiology , communication , cognition , social psychology , perception , medicine , linguistics , philosophy
Emotional stimuli have been shown to preferentially engage initial attention but their sustained effects on neural processing remain largely unknown. The present study evaluated whether emotional faces engage sustained neural processing by examining the attenuation of neural repetition suppression to repeated emotional faces. Repetition suppression of neural function refers to the general reduction of neural activity when processing a repeated stimulus. Preferential processing of emotional face stimuli, however, should elicit sustained neural processing such that repetition suppression to repeated emotional faces is attenuated relative to faces with no emotional content. We measured the reduction of functional magnetic resonance imaging signals associated with immediate repetition of neutral, angry and happy faces. Whereas neutral faces elicited the greatest suppression in ventral visual cortex, followed by angry faces, repetition suppression was the most attenuated for happy faces. Indeed, happy faces showed almost no repetition suppression in part of the right-inferior occipital and fusiform gyri, which play an important role in face-identity processing. Our findings suggest that happy faces are associated with sustained visual encoding of face identity and thereby assist in the formation of more elaborate representations of the faces, congruent with findings in the behavioral literature.
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