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Neural correlates of processing valence and arousal in affective words.

Lewis PA, Critchley H, Rotshtein P, Dolan R

Cereb Cortex. 2007;17( 3):742-8.

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Abstract

Psychological frameworks conceptualize emotion along 2 dimensions, "valence" and "arousal." Arousal invokes a single axis of intensity increasing from neutral to maximally arousing. Valence can be described variously as a bipolar continuum, as independent positive and negative dimensions, or as hedonic value (distance from neutral). In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to characterize neural activity correlating with arousal and with distinct models of valence during presentation of affective word stimuli. Our results extend observations in the chemosensory domain suggesting a double dissociation in which subregions of orbitofrontal cortex process valence, whereas amygdala preferentially processes arousal. In addition, our data support the physiological validity of descriptions of valence along independent axes or as absolute distance from neutral but fail to support the validity of descriptions of valence along a bipolar continuum.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Published date:
Journal title:
ISSN:
Place of publication:
United States
Volume:
17( 3)
Start page:
742
End page:
8
Pagination:
742-8
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:1d31994
Created:
2nd September, 2009, 14:13:58
Last modified:
2nd September, 2009, 14:13:58

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