The role of attention in the generation of anticipatory potentials to affective stimuli: an ERP and source analysis study
Ester Benzaquén, Timothy D Griffiths, Sukhbinder Kumar

TL;DR
This study explores how attention influences brain activity when anticipating emotional versus neutral sounds, finding that the brain's electrical signals reflect attention rather than the emotional content itself.
Contribution
The study clarifies that anticipatory EEG negativity reflects attentional resource allocation, not emotional content, using EEG and source analysis.
Findings
No difference in EEG amplitude was found between aversive and neutral anticipation.
Response times positively correlated with EEG amplitude—stronger negativity was linked to faster responses.
EEG source reconstruction showed activation in the salience network, including the insula and somatosensory cortex.
Abstract
Anticipatory EEG signals are characterized by the occurrence of negative slow cortical potentials. This negativity is posed to be enhanced when expecting highly emotional stimuli; however, the specific role attention plays in its generation is unclear, as emotional content is more salient and arousing, and thus recruits higher attentional resources. Here, affective anticipation signals were recorded in 35 participants with EEG, and their brain sources elucidated using multiple sparse priors algorithm. Using a cued-paradigm, the category of a sound being negatively valenced or neutral could be predicted with a 68.2% accuracy. To shift attentional resources away from the emotional content, participants were instructed to listen and respond to a burst of white noise that occurred on 9.1% of trials. Results showed slower reaction times following the aversive cue, yet no difference in EEG…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroscience and Music Perception · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
