Coherence and divergence in autonomic‐subjective affective space

Author:

Cuve Hélio Clemente José12ORCID,Harper Joseph1,Catmur Caroline3ORCID,Bird Geoffrey14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. School of Psychological Science University of Bristol Bristol UK

3. Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience King's College London London UK

4. School of Psychology University of Birmingham Birmingham UK

Abstract

AbstractA central tenet of many theories of emotion is that emotional states are accompanied by distinct patterns of autonomic activity. However, experimental studies of coherence between subjective and autonomic responses during emotional states provide little evidence of coherence. Crucially, previous studies investigating coherence have either adopted univariate approaches or made limited use of multivariate analytic approaches by investigating subjective and autonomic responses separately. The current study addressed this question using a multivariate dimensional approach to build a common autonomic‐subjective affective space incorporating subjective responses and three different autonomic signals (heart rate, skin conductance response, and pupil diameter), measured during an emotion‐inducing task, in 51 participants. Results showed that autonomic and subjective responses could be adequately described in a two‐dimensional affective space. The first dimension included contributions from subjective and autonomic responses, indicating coherence, while contributions to the second dimension were almost exclusively of autonomic covariance. Thus, while there was a degree of coherence between autonomic and subjective emotional responses, there was substantial structure in autonomic responses that did not covary with subjective emotional experience. This study, therefore, contributes new insights into the relationship between subjective and autonomic emotional responses, and provides a framework for future multimodal emotion research, enabling both hypothesis‐ and data‐driven testing.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,Biological Psychiatry,Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental Neuroscience,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems,Neurology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Neuroscience

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