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Gender Differences in Neural Responses to Perceptually Invisible Fearful Face-An ERP Study

Authors
Lee, Seung A.Kim, Chai-YounShim, MiseonLee, Seung-Hwan
Issue Date
26-1월-2017
Publisher
FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Keywords
gender difference; emotional processing; subthreshold; fearful face; event-related potential
Citation
FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, v.11
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume
11
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/84872
DOI
10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00006
ISSN
1662-5153
Abstract
Women tend to respond to emotional stimuli differently from men. This study aimed at investigating whether neural responses to perceptually invisible emotional stimuli differ between men and women by exploiting event-related potential (ERP). Forty healthy participants (21 women) were recruited for the main experiment. A control experiment was conducted by excluding nine (7 women) participants from the main experiment and replacing them with additional ten (6 women) participants (total 41 participants) where Beck's Anxiety Inventory (BAI) and Beck's Depression Inventory (BDI) scores were controlled. Using the visual backward masking paradigm, either a fearful or a neutral face stimulus was presented in varied durations (subthreshold, near-threshold, or suprathreshold) followed by a mask. Participants performed a two-alternative forced choice (2-AFC) emotion discrimination task on each face. Behavioral analysis showed that participants were unaware of masked stimuli of which duration was the shortest and, therefore, processed at subthreshold. Nevertheless, women showed significantly larger response in P100 amplitude to subthreshold fearful faces than men. This result remained consistent in the control experiment. Our findings indicate gender-differences in neural response to subthreshold emotional face, which is reflected in the early processing stage.
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