面部表情和颜色在调节 ERP P3 方面的相互作用

Yuya Hasegawa, Hideki Tamura, Shigeki Nakauchi, Tetsuto Minami
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摘要

面部表情和颜色之间的关系会影响人类的认知功能,如感知和记忆。然而,这些关系是否会影响注意力仍不清楚。此外,面部表情是否会影响选择性注意也是个未知数;例如,红色的愤怒面孔会增加负面的社会评价或情绪强度,但选择性注意是否会同样得到增强还不清楚。为了探究这些问题,我们通过记录脑电图(EEG)数据,研究了人脸的事件相关电位是否会因面部表情和颜色的不同而变化。我们使用结合了面部表情(愤怒、中性)和面部颜色(原色、红色、绿色)的刺激物进行了一项古怪的任务。参与者计算标准面部刺激中很少出现的目标面部刺激出现的次数。结果表明,目标面孔和标准面孔的 P3 振幅差异取决于面部表情和面部颜色的组合;红色愤怒面孔的 P3 振幅大于红色中性面孔的 P3 振幅。此外,面部表情或面部颜色对目标面孔的 P1 波幅没有显著的主效应或交互效应,而面部表情仅对 N170 波幅有显著的主效应。这些研究结果表明,人类对面部表情的选择性注意强度是根据对情绪和颜色之间关系的高阶语义加工而变化的,而不是简单的面部表情或面部颜色的单独效应。我们的研究结果支持这样一种观点,即从脑电图的角度来看,红色会增加人类对愤怒的反应。
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Interaction between facial expression and color in modulating ERP P3
The relationships between facial expression and color affect human cognition functions such as perception and memory. However, whether these relationships influence attention remains unclear. Additionally, whether facial expressions affect selective attention is unknown; for example, reddish angry faces increase negative social evaluation or emotion intensity, but it is unclear whether selective attention is similarly enhanced. To investigate these questions, we examined whether event-related potentials for faces vary depending on facial expression and color by recording electroencephalography (EEG) data. We conducted an oddball task using stimuli that combined facial expressions (angry, neutral) and facial colors (original, red, green). The participants counted the number of times a rarely appearing target face stimulus appeared among the standard face stimuli. The results indicated that the difference in P3 amplitudes for the target and standard faces depended on the combinations of facial expressions and facial colors; the P3 amplitudes for red angry faces were greater than those for red neutral faces. Additionally, there was no significant main effect or interaction effect of facial expression or facial color on P1 amplitudes for the target, and there were significant main effects of facial expression only on the N170 amplitude. These findings suggest that the intensity of a human's selective attention to facial expressions varies according to the higher-order semantic processing of the relationship between emotion and color rather than simple facial expression or facial color effects individually. Our results support the idea that red color increases the human response to anger from an EEG perspective.
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