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The role of emotion and motivation in visual information processing: Neural mechanisms and their change in depressive disorder

Fachliche Zuordnung Biologische Psychiatrie
Förderung Förderung von 2008 bis 2015
Projektkennung Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Projektnummer 61642098
 
Erstellungsjahr 2015

Zusammenfassung der Projektergebnisse

This research program examined the mechanism by which the emotional and motivational aspects of visual stimuli influence information processing in the visual system in healthy individuals and patients with affective disorders. There were three major topics. The first topic was whether behaviorally relevant information, such as emotional expression of a face, is processed automatically, that is, even in the absence of awareness, and whether this grants emotional information preferential access to awareness. We showed that emotions, but also other types of facial information, e.g., eye gaze and face-like configuration, influence access of visual stimuli to awareness. We were successful in characterizing low-level features of emotional faces that account for differences between emotional expressions in gaining access to awareness, both behaviorally and at the neural level with fMRI. Studying the relationship between affective psychopathology and processing of emotional information, we observed an advantage of mood-congruent stimuli in gaining access to awareness in depressed patients, and of spider stimuli in spider phobics. The second topic of this research program was concerned with the role of attention in the modulation of visual cortex responses to emotional stimuli. Using fMRI, we found that responses to fearful face stimuli in early visual areas (e.g., V1) are enhanced when a stimulus is unattended, but not when it is attended. Interestingly, early visual cortex responses to neutral stimuli are enhanced by the presence of an unattended emotional stimulus elsewhere in the visual field, suggesting a redistribution of processing resources that helps to maintain task-related goals even in the presence of threat signals. The third topic focused on the neural mechanisms of motivational information processing. fMRI revealed that responses to rewardindicating information in visual cortex and subcortical reward circuits are independent of attention, whereas insular cortex is modulated by attention, suggesting a role for the insula in the awareness of motivational information. In a further fMRI study we found that different subregions of orbitofrontal cortex encode the intrinsic motivational value and salience, respectively, of visual stimuli. A separate eyetracking experiment showed that learned motivational value affects the latency of saccades towards visual stimuli. Unmedicated patients with major depression showed altered prediction-error related fMRI responses in medal orbitofrontal cortex during reward learning, but no differential activation in visual cortex. Finally, an additional project investigated the role of beliefs in visual information processing and found that the effect of beliefs on conscious visual perception is reflected by MRI activity patterns in visual cortex. Taken together, this research program has helped to characterize the role of emotion, motivation and beliefs on visual information processing both at the behavioral and at the neural level and helped to understand the role of perceptual factors in depressive psychopathology.

Projektbezogene Publikationen (Auswahl)

 
 

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