Increased sensorimotor activity during categorisation of emotionally ambiguous faces

Author:

Karakale Özge1ORCID,McNair Nicolas2,Moore Matthew3,Kirk Ian4

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology The University of Adelaide Adelaide Australia

2. School of Psychology The University of Sydney Sydney Australia

3. School of Medicine Management The University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

4. School of Psychology The University of Auckland Auckland New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractActions are rarely devoid of emotional content. Thus, a more complete picture of the neural mechanisms underlying the mental simulation of observed actions requires more research using emotion information. The present study used high‐density electroencephalography to investigate mental simulation associated with facial emotion categorisation. Alpha‐mu rhythm modulation was measured at each frequency, from 8 Hz to 13 Hz, to infer the degree of sensorimotor simulation. Results suggest the sensitivity of the sensorimotor activity to emotional information, because (1) categorising static images of neutral faces as happy or sad was associated with stronger suppression in the central region than categorising clearly happy faces, (2) there was preliminary evidence indicating that the strongest suppression in the central region was in response to neutral faces, followed by sad and then happy faces and (3) in the control task, which required categorising images with the head oriented right, left, or forward as right or left, differences between conditions showed a pattern more indicative of task difficulty rather than sensorimotor engagement. Dissociable processing of emotional information in facial expressions and directionality information in head orientations was further captured in beta band activity (14–20 Hz). Stronger mu suppression to neutral faces indicates that sensorimotor simulation extends beyond crude motor mimicry. We propose that mu rhythm responses to facial expressions may serve as a biomarker for empathy circuit activation. Future research should investigate whether atypical or inconsistent mu rhythm responses to facial expressions indicate difficulties in understanding or sharing emotions.

Publisher

Wiley

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