Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study

Background: The neural bases of emotion are most often studied using short non-natural stimuli and assessed using correlational methods. Here we use a brain perturbation approach to make causal inferences between brain activity and emotional reaction to a long segment of dance. Objective/hypothesis:...

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Main Authors: Marie-Hélène Grosbras, Haodan Tan, Frank Pollick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-04-01
Series:Brain Stimulation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1935861X12000368
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spelling doaj-8f6c84007abd490fa11444be2d7c2f132021-03-18T04:35:51ZengElsevierBrain Stimulation1935-861X2012-04-0152130136Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS studyMarie-Hélène Grosbras0Haodan Tan1Frank Pollick2Corresponding author. Tel.: +44 1413305264; fax +44 1413303666.; Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, 58 Hillhead Street, G128QB Glasgow, Scotland, United KingdomInstitute of Neuroscience and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, 58 Hillhead Street, G128QB Glasgow, Scotland, United KingdomInstitute of Neuroscience and Psychology, School of Psychology, University of Glasgow, 58 Hillhead Street, G128QB Glasgow, Scotland, United KingdomBackground: The neural bases of emotion are most often studied using short non-natural stimuli and assessed using correlational methods. Here we use a brain perturbation approach to make causal inferences between brain activity and emotional reaction to a long segment of dance. Objective/hypothesis: We aimed to apply offline rTMS over the brain regions involved in subjective emotional ratings to explore whether this could change the appreciation of a dance performance. Methods: We first used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to identify regions correlated with fluctuating emotional rating during a 4-min dance performance, looking at both positive and negative correlation. Identified regions were further characterized using meta-data interrogation. Low-frequency repetitive TMS was applied over the most important node in a different group of participants prior to them rating the same dance performance as in the fMRI session. Results: FMRI revealed a negative correlation between subjective emotional judgement and activity in the right posterior parietal cortex. This region is commonly involved in cognitive tasks and not in emotional task. Parietal rTMS had no effect on the general affective response, but it significantly (P<0.05 using exact t-statistics) enhanced the rating of the moments eliciting the highest positive judgements. Conclusion: These results establish a direct link between posterior parietal cortex activity and emotional reaction to dance. They can be interpreted in the framework of competition between resources allocated to emotion and resources allocated to cognitive functions. They highlight potential use of brain stimulation in neuro-æsthetic investigations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1935861X12000368rTMSEmotionDanceNeuro-aestheticParietal cortex
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie-Hélène Grosbras
Haodan Tan
Frank Pollick
spellingShingle Marie-Hélène Grosbras
Haodan Tan
Frank Pollick
Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
Brain Stimulation
rTMS
Emotion
Dance
Neuro-aesthetic
Parietal cortex
author_facet Marie-Hélène Grosbras
Haodan Tan
Frank Pollick
author_sort Marie-Hélène Grosbras
title Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
title_short Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
title_full Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
title_fullStr Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
title_full_unstemmed Dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: A low-frequency rTMS study
title_sort dance and emotion in posterior parietal cortex: a low-frequency rtms study
publisher Elsevier
series Brain Stimulation
issn 1935-861X
publishDate 2012-04-01
description Background: The neural bases of emotion are most often studied using short non-natural stimuli and assessed using correlational methods. Here we use a brain perturbation approach to make causal inferences between brain activity and emotional reaction to a long segment of dance. Objective/hypothesis: We aimed to apply offline rTMS over the brain regions involved in subjective emotional ratings to explore whether this could change the appreciation of a dance performance. Methods: We first used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to identify regions correlated with fluctuating emotional rating during a 4-min dance performance, looking at both positive and negative correlation. Identified regions were further characterized using meta-data interrogation. Low-frequency repetitive TMS was applied over the most important node in a different group of participants prior to them rating the same dance performance as in the fMRI session. Results: FMRI revealed a negative correlation between subjective emotional judgement and activity in the right posterior parietal cortex. This region is commonly involved in cognitive tasks and not in emotional task. Parietal rTMS had no effect on the general affective response, but it significantly (P<0.05 using exact t-statistics) enhanced the rating of the moments eliciting the highest positive judgements. Conclusion: These results establish a direct link between posterior parietal cortex activity and emotional reaction to dance. They can be interpreted in the framework of competition between resources allocated to emotion and resources allocated to cognitive functions. They highlight potential use of brain stimulation in neuro-æsthetic investigations.
topic rTMS
Emotion
Dance
Neuro-aesthetic
Parietal cortex
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1935861X12000368
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AT haodantan danceandemotioninposteriorparietalcortexalowfrequencyrtmsstudy
AT frankpollick danceandemotioninposteriorparietalcortexalowfrequencyrtmsstudy
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