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               [M.V. Peelen,A.P. Atkinson and P. Vuilleumier The Journal of Neuroscience, July 28, 2010 • 30(30):10127–10134 ]


                                                    SUPRAMODAL
                                                    REPRESENTATIONS OF
                                                    PERCEIVED EMOTIONS IN THE
                                                    HUMAN BRAIN

MONDAY 27 FEBRUARY 2012                                                                     MSCs: Angelo Bruschi, MD
+ INTRODUCTION (I)
     Successful social interaction requires a precise understanding
      of the feelings, thoughts, intentions and desires of other
      people.


                           Humans have the exceptional ability to infer
                            complex mental states from subtle sensory
                            cues. (e.g. Face, Body, Voice). (de Gelder et al., 2006 )




     These signals lead to the recognition of
      an emotional state and activate similar
      emotion-specific responses in the
      observer.                   (Magnée et al., 2007)
+ MAIN QUESTION (II)




      ARE THERE ANY BRAIN REGIONS
       THAT ENCODE EMOTIONS
       INDIPENDENTLY OF THE MODALITY
       THROUGH WICH THEY ARE
       PERCEIVED?
+ STUDY DESIGN (III)


          VOICE
         STIMULI




                         HEALTY        fMRI
           BODY        VOLUNTEERS   RESPONSES
         EMOTIONS




           FACIAL
          EMOTIONS
+ PARTICIPANTS(IV)



    18 Adult Healthy Volunteers (10 women,
     mean age 26, range 20-32)                             HAPPINESS

                                                   ANGER
    All right handed, normal vision, no history              SADNESS

     of psychiatric or neurological disease        FEAR
                                                               DISGUST


    5 different emotions chosen
+ EMOTIONAL STIMULI: FACES (V)



     Movies of emotional faces expression
      taken from Banse and Scherer (1996).
      Non facial body parts were cropped.

     5 different emotions chosen (Anger,
      Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness).

     Four actors (2 male + 2 female)
      expressed each emotion.
+ EMOTIONAL STIMULI: BODY (VI)



                            Movies of emotional body expression taken
                             from Atkinson (2004). Actors wore uniform
                             dark-grey, tight-fitting clothes and headwear
                             so that all body parts (including face) were
                             covered.

                            5 different emotions chosen (Anger,
                             Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness).

                            Four actors (2 male + 2 female) expressed
                             each emotion.
+ EMOTIONAL STIMULI: VOICE (VII)



    Emotional voice stimuli taken from Montreal
     Affective Voice set, Belin(2008). Consisted
     of short (~1s), non linguistic interjections
     (“Ahh”) expressing different emotions.

    5 different emotions chosen (Anger,
     Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness)

    Four actors (2 male + 2 female) expressed
     each emotion
+ DESIGN AND PROCEDURE (VIII)


                                   Participants performed 6
                                    fMRI runs, each of 36 trials
                                    as shown in figure.

                                   3 blocks of 12 trials, differing
                                    in type of stimuli, with 2
                                    different clips for each of the
                                    5 emotions.

                                   Trials presented in random
                                    order, to prevent any
                                    prediction bias.

                                   After each presentation,
                                    participants rated each
                                    stimulus on a 3 point scale.
                                    (Enhancement of involved
                                    brain regions)
+ DATA ACQUISITION: fMRI (IX)




        fMRI data were analysed using Multivoxel Pattern Analysis
         (MVPA): a technique sensitive to fine-grained neural
         representations. (Haynes & Rees, 2005)

        Moreover, using a spherical searchlight approach they tested
         for regions in the brain where local activity patterns contained
         information about emotion categories (fear, anger, etc.)
         independent of stimulus modality (body, voice, face). (Kriegeskorte et
         al., 2006)
+ RESULTS: BEHAVIOURAL (X)



                                The average rating of the perceived
                                 emotions is 2,24 (as show in figure)

                                Differences between perceived
                                 intensities of emotions depended on
                                 modality (p< 0.001). (Anger > Voice
                                 Disgust > Body)



         THEY EXCLUDED THE POSSIBILITY THAT DIFFERENCES
         IN PERCEIVED INTENSITY COULD PROVIDE AN
         ALTERNATIVE   EXPLANATION   FOR    SUPRAMODAL
         EMOTION-SPECIFIC fMRI RESPONSES. (NONE OF THE
         CORRELATIONS POSITIVE)
+ RESULTS: fMRI (XI)
   TWO CLUSTERS SHOWED SUPRAMODAL EMOTION INFORMATION:                             rmPFC and left
   STS




     Results of a whole-brain searchlight analysis showed clusters with significant emotion-specific activity
      patterns across modality. Similarity of activity patterns was expressed as a correlation value, with higher
      correlations indicating higher similarity. rmPFC (p<0.05) and left STS (p<0.00001)

     Similarity of activity patterns was expressed as a correlation value, with higher correlations indicating
      higher similarity.
+ RESULTS: fMRI (XII)
     SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL




    Supp Figure 1. Graphs showing the correlation matrices between the 5 emotion
    categories, averaged across the 3 cross‐modality comparisons (face‐body, face‐
  Graphs showing the correlation matrices between the 5 emotion categories, averaged
    voice, body‐voice) in MPFC (left) and STS (right) searchlight clusters. These
   across the 3 cross-modality comparisons. These matrices provide information about the
    matrices provide information about the similarities between the emotion‐related
   similarities patterns. In both regions, the average within‐emotion correlation was
    fMRI activity between the emotion-related fMRI activity patterns.
    significantly higher than the average between‐emotion correlation (see Figure 3,
    main text). In MPFC, the within‐emotion correlations (diagonal elements) were
  The activity associate with the between‐emotion correlations for Fear, different stimulus types
    higher than each of the 4 corresponding same emotion perceived from
    Disgust, and Happiness. Anger was equally correlated with Anger (r=0.5), Disgust
   (Diagonal Elements) more Sadness was relatively highly correlated with than between them:
    (r=0.5), and Fear (r=0.5), whereas similar within emotion categories
    Disgust and Anger. In STS, all within‐emotion correlations were higher than each of
    the 4 corresponding between‐emotion correlations.
    Note that different scales were used for MPFC (0.35‐0.55) and STS (0.55‐0.75) PERCEIVED EMOTIONS
        THERE IS A SUPRAMODAL REPRESENTATION OF
    graphs, reflecting the difference in the mean correlation of these regions (see also
    Figure 3, main text).
    Abbreviations: Ang=anger, Dis=disgust, Fea=fear, Hap=happiness, Sad=sadness.
+ DISCUSSION: SUMMARY (XIII)

 Multi Voxel Pattern of activity in two cortical brain regions (rmPFC and left STS)
 carried information about emotion categories REGARDLESS of the specific
 sensory cues (Body, Face and Voice stimuli).



    NO DIFFERENCES FOUNDED between the
     perceived intensity of different emotion categories:
     EMOTION SPECIFIC PATTERNS in rmPFC and
     STS     could   be     related   to   SYSTEMATIC
     DIFFERENCES in the intensity of different emotions.

    NO CONSISTENT DIFFERENCES between emotion
     categories in the average magnitude of activity of
     these regions, indicating SIMILAR OVERALL
     RECRUITMENT of rmPFC and STS in processing
     different types of emotions
+ DISCUSSION: HYPOTESIS 1 (XIV)
 BRIEFLY , THESE AREAS PROCESS THE "CONTENT" OF A
 STIMULUS, REGARDLESS OF ITS SENSORY CHARACTERISTICS.

 FIRST HYPOTESIS: These regions contains individual neurons that selectively represent
 emotion categories at an ABSTRACT LEVEL. It is not known if this specific tuning may be
 limited to the basic emotion categories used here or it’s possible to extend to:


                                             THE BASIC EMOTION USED IN THIS STUDY
                                              (Oatley & Johnson-Laird, 1987)


                                             OTHER EMOTIONS          (eg.   Guilt,   Shame)
                                              (Binder et al., 2009)


                                             NON      EMOTIONAL       MENTAL         STATES
                                              (Binder et al., 2009)


                                             CONCEPTUAL       REPRESENTATION          MORE
                                              GENERALLY         (Binder et  al.,        2009)
+ DISCUSSION: HYPOTESIS 2 (XV)
 BRIEFLY , THESE AREAS PROCESS THE "CONTENT" OF A
 STIMULUS, REGARDLESS OF ITS SENSORY CHARACTERISTICS.


 SECOND HYPOTESIS: It is possible that Neurons in rmPCF and/or left STS may code for:


    PARTICULAR EMOTION DIMENSIONS
      (Russel, 1980)


    SPECIFIC EMOTION COMPONENTS
     (Novelty, Pleasantness, Relevance)
       (Scherer, 1984)


    ACTION TENDENCIES ASSOCIATED WITH
     EMOTIONS (Frijda, 1987)
+ CONCLUSIONS: FUTURE STUDIES
  (XV)


                  QUESTIONS FOR FUTURE STUDIES:


      RMPFC AND STS REPRESENT OTHER (EMOTIONAL          AND   NON
       EMOTIONAL) MENTAL STATES THAN THOSE TESTED?

      WHAT EXTENT IS EMOTION SPECIFICITY IN THESE AREAS RELATED TO
       THE EXPLICIT EVALUATION OF THE EMOTIONS? DOES EMOTION
       SPECIFICITY PERSIST WHEN STIMULI IS PRESENTED OUTSIDE THE
       FOCUS OF ATTENTION?

      ARE RMPFC AND STS SIMILARLY ACTIVATED BY PERCEIVED AND
       EXPERIENCED EMOTIONS?

      IS THERE AN OVERLAP IN THE REPRESENTATION OF PERCEIVED
       EMOTIONS AND SELF EXPERIENCED?
+
THANKS FOR THE
ATTENTION

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Perceived emotion in the brain

  • 1. + [M.V. Peelen,A.P. Atkinson and P. Vuilleumier The Journal of Neuroscience, July 28, 2010 • 30(30):10127–10134 ] SUPRAMODAL REPRESENTATIONS OF PERCEIVED EMOTIONS IN THE HUMAN BRAIN MONDAY 27 FEBRUARY 2012 MSCs: Angelo Bruschi, MD
  • 2. + INTRODUCTION (I)  Successful social interaction requires a precise understanding of the feelings, thoughts, intentions and desires of other people.  Humans have the exceptional ability to infer complex mental states from subtle sensory cues. (e.g. Face, Body, Voice). (de Gelder et al., 2006 )  These signals lead to the recognition of an emotional state and activate similar emotion-specific responses in the observer. (Magnée et al., 2007)
  • 3. + MAIN QUESTION (II)  ARE THERE ANY BRAIN REGIONS THAT ENCODE EMOTIONS INDIPENDENTLY OF THE MODALITY THROUGH WICH THEY ARE PERCEIVED?
  • 4. + STUDY DESIGN (III) VOICE STIMULI HEALTY fMRI BODY VOLUNTEERS RESPONSES EMOTIONS FACIAL EMOTIONS
  • 5. + PARTICIPANTS(IV)  18 Adult Healthy Volunteers (10 women, mean age 26, range 20-32) HAPPINESS ANGER  All right handed, normal vision, no history SADNESS of psychiatric or neurological disease FEAR DISGUST  5 different emotions chosen
  • 6. + EMOTIONAL STIMULI: FACES (V)  Movies of emotional faces expression taken from Banse and Scherer (1996). Non facial body parts were cropped.  5 different emotions chosen (Anger, Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness).  Four actors (2 male + 2 female) expressed each emotion.
  • 7. + EMOTIONAL STIMULI: BODY (VI)  Movies of emotional body expression taken from Atkinson (2004). Actors wore uniform dark-grey, tight-fitting clothes and headwear so that all body parts (including face) were covered.  5 different emotions chosen (Anger, Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness).  Four actors (2 male + 2 female) expressed each emotion.
  • 8. + EMOTIONAL STIMULI: VOICE (VII)  Emotional voice stimuli taken from Montreal Affective Voice set, Belin(2008). Consisted of short (~1s), non linguistic interjections (“Ahh”) expressing different emotions.  5 different emotions chosen (Anger, Disgust, Happiness, Fear, Sadness)  Four actors (2 male + 2 female) expressed each emotion
  • 9. + DESIGN AND PROCEDURE (VIII)  Participants performed 6 fMRI runs, each of 36 trials as shown in figure.  3 blocks of 12 trials, differing in type of stimuli, with 2 different clips for each of the 5 emotions.  Trials presented in random order, to prevent any prediction bias.  After each presentation, participants rated each stimulus on a 3 point scale. (Enhancement of involved brain regions)
  • 10. + DATA ACQUISITION: fMRI (IX)  fMRI data were analysed using Multivoxel Pattern Analysis (MVPA): a technique sensitive to fine-grained neural representations. (Haynes & Rees, 2005)  Moreover, using a spherical searchlight approach they tested for regions in the brain where local activity patterns contained information about emotion categories (fear, anger, etc.) independent of stimulus modality (body, voice, face). (Kriegeskorte et al., 2006)
  • 11. + RESULTS: BEHAVIOURAL (X)  The average rating of the perceived emotions is 2,24 (as show in figure)  Differences between perceived intensities of emotions depended on modality (p< 0.001). (Anger > Voice Disgust > Body) THEY EXCLUDED THE POSSIBILITY THAT DIFFERENCES IN PERCEIVED INTENSITY COULD PROVIDE AN ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATION FOR SUPRAMODAL EMOTION-SPECIFIC fMRI RESPONSES. (NONE OF THE CORRELATIONS POSITIVE)
  • 12. + RESULTS: fMRI (XI) TWO CLUSTERS SHOWED SUPRAMODAL EMOTION INFORMATION: rmPFC and left STS  Results of a whole-brain searchlight analysis showed clusters with significant emotion-specific activity patterns across modality. Similarity of activity patterns was expressed as a correlation value, with higher correlations indicating higher similarity. rmPFC (p<0.05) and left STS (p<0.00001)  Similarity of activity patterns was expressed as a correlation value, with higher correlations indicating higher similarity.
  • 13. + RESULTS: fMRI (XII) SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL Supp Figure 1. Graphs showing the correlation matrices between the 5 emotion categories, averaged across the 3 cross‐modality comparisons (face‐body, face‐  Graphs showing the correlation matrices between the 5 emotion categories, averaged voice, body‐voice) in MPFC (left) and STS (right) searchlight clusters. These across the 3 cross-modality comparisons. These matrices provide information about the matrices provide information about the similarities between the emotion‐related similarities patterns. In both regions, the average within‐emotion correlation was fMRI activity between the emotion-related fMRI activity patterns. significantly higher than the average between‐emotion correlation (see Figure 3, main text). In MPFC, the within‐emotion correlations (diagonal elements) were  The activity associate with the between‐emotion correlations for Fear, different stimulus types higher than each of the 4 corresponding same emotion perceived from Disgust, and Happiness. Anger was equally correlated with Anger (r=0.5), Disgust (Diagonal Elements) more Sadness was relatively highly correlated with than between them: (r=0.5), and Fear (r=0.5), whereas similar within emotion categories Disgust and Anger. In STS, all within‐emotion correlations were higher than each of the 4 corresponding between‐emotion correlations. Note that different scales were used for MPFC (0.35‐0.55) and STS (0.55‐0.75) PERCEIVED EMOTIONS THERE IS A SUPRAMODAL REPRESENTATION OF graphs, reflecting the difference in the mean correlation of these regions (see also Figure 3, main text). Abbreviations: Ang=anger, Dis=disgust, Fea=fear, Hap=happiness, Sad=sadness.
  • 14. + DISCUSSION: SUMMARY (XIII) Multi Voxel Pattern of activity in two cortical brain regions (rmPFC and left STS) carried information about emotion categories REGARDLESS of the specific sensory cues (Body, Face and Voice stimuli).  NO DIFFERENCES FOUNDED between the perceived intensity of different emotion categories: EMOTION SPECIFIC PATTERNS in rmPFC and STS could be related to SYSTEMATIC DIFFERENCES in the intensity of different emotions.  NO CONSISTENT DIFFERENCES between emotion categories in the average magnitude of activity of these regions, indicating SIMILAR OVERALL RECRUITMENT of rmPFC and STS in processing different types of emotions
  • 15. + DISCUSSION: HYPOTESIS 1 (XIV) BRIEFLY , THESE AREAS PROCESS THE "CONTENT" OF A STIMULUS, REGARDLESS OF ITS SENSORY CHARACTERISTICS. FIRST HYPOTESIS: These regions contains individual neurons that selectively represent emotion categories at an ABSTRACT LEVEL. It is not known if this specific tuning may be limited to the basic emotion categories used here or it’s possible to extend to:  THE BASIC EMOTION USED IN THIS STUDY (Oatley & Johnson-Laird, 1987)  OTHER EMOTIONS (eg. Guilt, Shame) (Binder et al., 2009)  NON EMOTIONAL MENTAL STATES (Binder et al., 2009)  CONCEPTUAL REPRESENTATION MORE GENERALLY (Binder et al., 2009)
  • 16. + DISCUSSION: HYPOTESIS 2 (XV) BRIEFLY , THESE AREAS PROCESS THE "CONTENT" OF A STIMULUS, REGARDLESS OF ITS SENSORY CHARACTERISTICS. SECOND HYPOTESIS: It is possible that Neurons in rmPCF and/or left STS may code for:  PARTICULAR EMOTION DIMENSIONS (Russel, 1980)  SPECIFIC EMOTION COMPONENTS (Novelty, Pleasantness, Relevance) (Scherer, 1984)  ACTION TENDENCIES ASSOCIATED WITH EMOTIONS (Frijda, 1987)
  • 17. + CONCLUSIONS: FUTURE STUDIES (XV) QUESTIONS FOR FUTURE STUDIES:  RMPFC AND STS REPRESENT OTHER (EMOTIONAL AND NON EMOTIONAL) MENTAL STATES THAN THOSE TESTED?  WHAT EXTENT IS EMOTION SPECIFICITY IN THESE AREAS RELATED TO THE EXPLICIT EVALUATION OF THE EMOTIONS? DOES EMOTION SPECIFICITY PERSIST WHEN STIMULI IS PRESENTED OUTSIDE THE FOCUS OF ATTENTION?  ARE RMPFC AND STS SIMILARLY ACTIVATED BY PERCEIVED AND EXPERIENCED EMOTIONS?  IS THERE AN OVERLAP IN THE REPRESENTATION OF PERCEIVED EMOTIONS AND SELF EXPERIENCED?