# The impact of positive and negative affect on aperiodic EEG activity: evidence for a shared neural basis of metacontrol and emotion

**Authors:** Jing Fan, Shuhui Lyu, Xiaolei Xu, Lorenza Colzato, Bernhard Hommel

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhaf335 · Cerebral Cortex (New York, NY) · 2026-01-07

## TL;DR

The study explores how emotions and cognitive control are linked through brain activity patterns, suggesting a shared neural basis.

## Contribution

It identifies a mechanistic link between metacontrol and emotion via aperiodic EEG activity.

## Key findings

- Positive emotions increase aperiodic EEG activity, while negative emotions decrease it.
- Emotional stimuli influence behavior based on task relevance but not aperiodic activity.
- Emotions may reflect the 'feel' of cognitive control biases toward flexibility or persistence.

## Abstract

Metacontrol refers to the ability to dynamically adjust cognitive-control strategies, ensuring a balance between persistence and flexibility. Empirical findings point to a strong link between metacontrol and emotion, but the mechanistic underpinnings of this link remain unknown. Here, we had two goals. First, we hypothesized that metacontrol and emotion are mechanistically linked through aperiodic EEG activity, in the sense that both positive emotion and metacontrol flexibility come with increases, and both negative emotion and metacontrol persistence with decreases of aperiodic activity. Second, we tested whether and to what degree emotional stimuli affect behavior and aperiodic activity automatically. In a large sample (n = 120), we examined EEG and behavioral data from three tasks in which we systematically varied the task-relevance of the emotional information presented to participants. As hypothesized, positive pictures resulted in higher aperiodic activity than negative pictures. Task context and, more specifically, the relevance of emotional stimuli significantly influenced overt behavior but had no effect on aperiodic activity. We conclude that positive and negative emotions may represent the phenomenal “feel” of metacontrol biases towards flexibility and persistence, respectively, and that the degree to which processes are affected by emotional content automatically depends on the process under consideration.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CPZ (carboxypeptidase Z) [NCBI Gene 8532]
- **Diseases:** cognitive or attentional fatigue (MESH:D003072), cardiac (MESH:D006331), PSD (MESH:D001851)
- **Chemicals:** serotonin (MESH:D012701), Ag (MESH:D012834), AgCl (MESH:C037548), dopamine (MESH:D004298)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12774830/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12774830