Current and lasting effects of affect labeling on late positive potential (LPP) amplitudes elicited by negative events

Author:

Liang Jiafeng1,Lin Huiyan23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Psychology, School of Education Guangdong University of Education Guangzhou China

2. Institute of Applied Psychology, School of Public Administration Guangdong University of Finance Guangzhou China

3. Laboratory for Behavioral and Regional Finance Guangdong University of Finance Guangzhou China

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionLabeling the emotional aspect of self‐unrelated stimuli (i.e., affect labeling) is a crucial strategy for implicit emotion regulation. However, it is uncertain whether affect labeling influences event‐related potential (ERP) responses (e.g., the late positive potential, LPP) to negative stimuli in comparison with control conditions in which attention is shifted to the emotional content of the stimuli (e.g., affect matching). Additionally, it is unknown whether affect labeling has a lasting effect on the processing of negative stimuli.MethodsParticipants were required to label the emotion (negative or neutral) of target pictures with two words, to match the emotion with alternative pictures or to merely view the target pictures. Target pictures were presented again immediately after the regulation task. After all the target pictures had been labeled, matched and viewed, the pictures were re‐exposed for the third time.ResultsThe results showed that negative pictures elicited larger late LPP responses during the affect labeling task than during other tasks. However, the LPP responses were smaller for negative pictures in the affect labeling condition than in the other conditions when target pictures were re‐exposed immediately after the task. When target pictures were re‐presented again long after the regulation tasks, the LPP responses were smaller for negative stimuli with a history of affect labeling than viewing, whereas this effect did not differ between the affect labeling and matching conditions.ConclusionThe current findings suggest that affect labeling has current effects and, to some extent, has lasting effects on negative stimulus processing.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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