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What’s the meaning of this? A behavioral and neurophysiological investigation into the principles behind the classification of visual emotional stimuli

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    SYSNO ASEP0462136
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitleWhat’s the meaning of this? A behavioral and neurophysiological investigation into the principles behind the classification of visual emotional stimuli
    Author(s) Czekóová, K. (CZ)
    Shaw, D. J. (CZ)
    Urbánek, Tomáš (PSU-E) RID, ORCID, SAI
    Chládek, Jan (UPT-D) RID, ORCID, SAI
    Lamoš, M. (CZ)
    Roman, R. (CZ)
    Brázdil, M. (CZ)
    Source TitlePsychophysiology. - : Wiley - ISSN 0048-5772
    Roč. 53, č. 8 (2016), s. 1203-1216
    Number of pages14 s.
    Publication formPrint - P
    Languageeng - English
    CountryUS - United States
    KeywordsEmotion ; Semantic content ; Categorization ; Intracerebral EEG ; Cluster analysis
    Subject RIVAN - Psychology
    Subject RIV - cooperationInstitute of Scientific Instruments - Optics, Masers, Lasers
    R&D ProjectsGAP103/11/0933 GA ČR - Czech Science Foundation (CSF)
    LO1212 GA MŠMT - Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (MEYS)
    Method of publishingLimited access
    Institutional supportPSU-E - RVO:68081740 ; UPT-D - RVO:68081731
    UT WOS000382721300009
    EID SCOPUS84978674858
    DOI10.1111/psyp.12662
    AnnotationTwo experiments were performed to investigate the principles by which emotional stimuli are classified on the dimensions of valence and arousal. In Experiment 1, a large sample of healthy participants rated emotional stimuli according to both broad dimensions. Hierarchical cluster analyses performed on these ratings revealed that stimuli were clustered according to their semantic content at the beginning of the agglomerative process. Example semantic themes include food, violence, nudes, death, and objects. Importantly, this pattern occurred in a parallel fashion for ratings on both dimensions. In Experiment 2, we investigated if the same semantic clusters were differentiated at the neurophysiological level. Intracerebral EEG was recorded from 18 patients with intractable epilepsy who viewed the same set of stimuli. Not only did electrocortical responses differentiate between these data-defined semantic clusters, they converged with the behavioral measurements to highlight the importance of categories associated with survival and reproduction. These findings provide strong evidence that the semantic content of affective material influences their classification along the broad dimensions of valence and arousal, and this principle of categorization exerts an effect on the evoked emotional response. Future studies should consider data-driven techniques rather than normative ratings to identify more specific, semantically related emotional images.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Psychology
    ContactŠtěpánka Halamová, Halamova@praha.psu.cas.cz, Tel.: 222 222 096
    Year of Publishing2017
    Electronic addresshttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/psyp.12662
Number of the records: 1  

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