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Deconstructing threat: rethinking the interplay between biological and social relevance in the emotional salience of unpleasant images

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posted on 2025-05-11, 16:47 authored by Rosemaree Kathleen Miller, Frances MartinFrances Martin
The type of threat shown in an image influences the emotional salience of unpleasant images. Seventy-four participants (21 male) rated high threat, moderate threat, and neutral images featuring reptiles, firearms, or humans as electroencephalographic activity was recorded. The magnitude of P3b amplitudes coincided with the threat level of firearm and human images, whereas scenes of attacking snakes and aimed handguns evoked more positive late positive component (LPC) activity than non-attacking or neutral versions of these same stimuli. The lateralised early posterior negativity (EPN) in temporal occipital regions was most negative for firearms, followed by reptiles, and then humans, while the midline EPN in occipital regions was most negative for reptiles, followed by firearms, and then humans. These findings imply late event-related potential positivity is influenced by social relevance (the P3b) or the level of aggression displayed by the stimulus (the LPC), whereas stimulus type may be indexed by EPN modulation.

History

Journal title

Biological Psychology

Volume

149

Article number

107788

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science

School

School of Psychology

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