Somatosensory and motor contributions to emotion representation
Marianne C. Reddan, Luke Chang, Philip Kragel, Tor D. Wager

TL;DR
This study investigates how bodily sensations and motor processes contribute to emotion representation, showing that sensorimotor cortical activations are involved in embodied emotion perception.
Contribution
It provides neural evidence linking somatosensory and motor regions to emotion representation, supporting embodied emotion theories.
Findings
Sensorimotor cortices are involved in emotion-related bodily sensations.
Representational similarity analysis links body maps to neural activity.
Emotion perception involves sensorimotor and prefrontal brain regions.
Abstract
Emotion is often described as something people 'feel' in their bodies. Embodied emotion theorists propose that this connection is not purely linguistic; perceiving an emotion may require somatosensory and motor re-experiencing. However, it remains unclear whether self-reports of emotion-related bodily sensations (i.e., 'lump in my throat') are related to neural simulations of bodily action and sensation or whether they can be explained by cognitive appraisals or the visual features of socioemotional signals. To investigate this, participants (N = 21) were shown arousing emotional images that varied in valence, complexity, and content while undergoing fMRI scans. Participants then rated the images on a set of emotion appraisal scales and indicated where, on a body map, they experienced sensation in response to the image. To derive normative models of responses on these scales, a separate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAction Observation and Synchronization
MethodsSparse Evolutionary Training
