Insular intracranial activity identifies multiple facial expressions via diverse, intermixed temporal patterns at the single-contact level
Yingyu Huang, Lisen Sui, Liying Zhan, Chaolun Wang, Zhihan Guo, Yanjuan Li, Xiang Wu

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that insular cortex activity, recorded via stereoelectroencephalography during facial emotion recognition tasks, can reliably identify multiple expressions through diverse, intermixed neural patterns at the single-contact level.
Contribution
It reveals the insula's heterogeneous neural responses underpin its role in facial emotion perception, highlighting its potential as a versatile hub for emotional processing.
Findings
Insular activity identifies all tested facial expressions.
Diverse ERP responses are intermixed across the insula.
ERSPs contribute significantly to expression classification.
Abstract
How neural representations in the insular cortex support emotional processing remains poorly understood, and the extent to which the insula is specialized for disgust processing remains debated. We recorded stereoelectroencephalography data from the insula while human subjects with implanted electrode contacts performed a facial emotion recognition task involving disgusted, fearful, angry, sad, neutral, and happy expressions. Expression category specificity of insular activity was assessed via pairwise comparisons of within- and between-category pattern similarities, capturing both the shape and scale of event-related potentials (ERPs) and event-related spectral perturbations (ERSPs; theta to high-gamma frequency ranges). Insular activity successfully identified all investigated expressions, mediated by diverse ERP responses intermixed across the insula. In contrast to the marked…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFace Recognition and Perception · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
