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An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception

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An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception. / Czekóová, Kristína; Shaw, Daniel Joel; Urbánek, Tomáš et al.
In: Clinical Neurophysiology, Vol. 125, No. 5, 05.2014, p. e30-e31.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Czekóová, K, Shaw, DJ, Urbánek, T, Chládek, J, Roman, R & Brázdil, M 2014, 'An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception', Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 125, no. 5, pp. e30-e31. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057

APA

Czekóová, K., Shaw, D. J., Urbánek, T., Chládek, J., Roman, R., & Brázdil, M. (2014). An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception. Clinical Neurophysiology, 125(5), e30-e31. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057

Vancouver

Czekóová K, Shaw DJ, Urbánek T, Chládek J, Roman R, Brázdil M. An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception. Clinical Neurophysiology. 2014 May;125(5):e30-e31. doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057

Author

Czekóová, Kristína ; Shaw, Daniel Joel ; Urbánek, Tomáš et al. / An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception. In: Clinical Neurophysiology. 2014 ; Vol. 125, No. 5. pp. e30-e31.

Bibtex

@article{a6f352413e43477cbf4226052bc44ede,
title = "An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception",
abstract = "Introduction and objectives: Achieving an understanding of the principles underlying categorisation is important for a wide range of psychological phenomena, and especially for emotion processing. In a previous study with a large non-clinical sample, we observed spontaneous categorisation of IAPS images according to their semantic content. In the present study, we explored whether this principle of categorisation is reflected at the neurophysiological level.Methods: Eighteen patients suffering from pharmacologically intractable focal epilepsy (10 males) observed the same set of 120 IAPS images, and were asked subsequently to rate them on valence and arousal. The following semantic categories were contrasted on the basis of our previous results: Death, violence and suffering for negative valence; objects, erotica and portraits for neutral valence; and food, nature and social content for positive valence.Results: Event-related potentials (ERPs) were modulated according to semantic content, as indexed by the latency (lat), length, and the magnitude of the peak amplitude difference. Importantly, this occurred independently of perceived valence and arousal. Such categorisation emerged throughout many brain structures.Conclusions: Our findings provide strong evidence that semantic content is an important factor in the categorisation of non-verbal emotional stimuli, and pictures grouped together implicitly evoke distinct neurophysiological responses. This implies that an emotional response does indeed involve the extraction of meaning.",
author = "Krist{\'i}na Czek{\'o}ov{\'a} and Shaw, {Daniel Joel} and Tom{\'a}{\v s} Urb{\'a}nek and Jan Chl{\'a}dek and Robert Roman and Milan Br{\'a}zdil",
year = "2014",
month = may,
doi = "10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057",
language = "English",
volume = "125",
pages = "e30--e31",
journal = "Clinical Neurophysiology",
issn = "1388-2457",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - An intra-cranial eeg investigation into the role of semantic categorisation in emotion perception

AU - Czekóová, Kristína

AU - Shaw, Daniel Joel

AU - Urbánek, Tomáš

AU - Chládek, Jan

AU - Roman, Robert

AU - Brázdil, Milan

PY - 2014/5

Y1 - 2014/5

N2 - Introduction and objectives: Achieving an understanding of the principles underlying categorisation is important for a wide range of psychological phenomena, and especially for emotion processing. In a previous study with a large non-clinical sample, we observed spontaneous categorisation of IAPS images according to their semantic content. In the present study, we explored whether this principle of categorisation is reflected at the neurophysiological level.Methods: Eighteen patients suffering from pharmacologically intractable focal epilepsy (10 males) observed the same set of 120 IAPS images, and were asked subsequently to rate them on valence and arousal. The following semantic categories were contrasted on the basis of our previous results: Death, violence and suffering for negative valence; objects, erotica and portraits for neutral valence; and food, nature and social content for positive valence.Results: Event-related potentials (ERPs) were modulated according to semantic content, as indexed by the latency (lat), length, and the magnitude of the peak amplitude difference. Importantly, this occurred independently of perceived valence and arousal. Such categorisation emerged throughout many brain structures.Conclusions: Our findings provide strong evidence that semantic content is an important factor in the categorisation of non-verbal emotional stimuli, and pictures grouped together implicitly evoke distinct neurophysiological responses. This implies that an emotional response does indeed involve the extraction of meaning.

AB - Introduction and objectives: Achieving an understanding of the principles underlying categorisation is important for a wide range of psychological phenomena, and especially for emotion processing. In a previous study with a large non-clinical sample, we observed spontaneous categorisation of IAPS images according to their semantic content. In the present study, we explored whether this principle of categorisation is reflected at the neurophysiological level.Methods: Eighteen patients suffering from pharmacologically intractable focal epilepsy (10 males) observed the same set of 120 IAPS images, and were asked subsequently to rate them on valence and arousal. The following semantic categories were contrasted on the basis of our previous results: Death, violence and suffering for negative valence; objects, erotica and portraits for neutral valence; and food, nature and social content for positive valence.Results: Event-related potentials (ERPs) were modulated according to semantic content, as indexed by the latency (lat), length, and the magnitude of the peak amplitude difference. Importantly, this occurred independently of perceived valence and arousal. Such categorisation emerged throughout many brain structures.Conclusions: Our findings provide strong evidence that semantic content is an important factor in the categorisation of non-verbal emotional stimuli, and pictures grouped together implicitly evoke distinct neurophysiological responses. This implies that an emotional response does indeed involve the extraction of meaning.

U2 - 10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057

DO - 10.1016/j.clinph.2013.12.057

M3 - Journal article

VL - 125

SP - e30-e31

JO - Clinical Neurophysiology

JF - Clinical Neurophysiology

SN - 1388-2457

IS - 5

ER -