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Author Notes:

Christine Wilson-Mendenhall cd.wilson@neu.edu

Joint senior authorship:LFB and LWB

We thank Lynne Nygaard for her assistance and guidance in recording the scenarios. We thank Yesenia Mares, Sarah Brown, Robert Smith, and the Emory Biomedical Imaging Technology Center for assistance with data collection. Finally, thanks to L. Nygaard, S. Hamann, and K. Wallen for their comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

Preparation of this manuscript was supported by an NIH Director's Pioneer Award DPI OD003312 to Lisa Feldman Barrett at Northeastern University with a sub-contract to Lawrence Barsalou at Emory University.

Keywords:

  • emotions
  • brain
  • neuroimaging

Neural Evidence That Human Emotions Share Core Affective Properties

Tools:

Journal Title:

Psychological Science

Volume:

Volume 24, Number 6

Publisher:

, Pages 947-956

Type of Work:

Article | Post-print: After Peer Review

Abstract:

Research on the “emotional brain” remains centered around the idea that emotions like fear, happiness, and sadness result from specialized and distinct neural circuitry. Accumulating behavioral and physiological evidence suggests, instead, that emotions are grounded in core affect – a person's fluctuating level of pleasant or unpleasant arousal. A neuroimaging study revealed that participants' subjective ratings of valence (i.e., pleasure/displeasure) and of arousal evoked by various fear, happiness, and sadness experiences correlated with neural activity in specific brain regions (orbitofrontal cortex and amygdala, respectively). We observed these correlations across diverse instances within each emotion category, as well as across instances from all three categories. Consistent with a psychological construction approach to emotion, the results suggest that neural circuitry realizes more basic processes across discrete emotions. The implicated brain regions regulate the body to deal with the world, producing the affective changes at the core of emotions and many other psychological phenomena.

Copyright information:

© 2013 by Association for Psychological Science

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