Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms

The choice of a meaningful baseline condition is a crucial issue for each experimental design. In the case of cognitive emotion regulation, it is common to either let participants passively view emotional stimuli without any further specific instructions or to instruct them to actively attend to and...

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Main Authors: Kersten eDiers, Fanny eWeber, Burkhard eBrocke, Alexander eStrobel, Sabine eSchönfeld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00347/full
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spelling doaj-c947d51e257d429ba034d98ef963d2e72020-11-24T21:28:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-04-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0034776516Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigmsKersten eDiers0Fanny eWeber1Burkhard eBrocke2Alexander eStrobel3Sabine eSchönfeld4TU DresdenTU DresdenTU DresdenTU DresdenTU DresdenThe choice of a meaningful baseline condition is a crucial issue for each experimental design. In the case of cognitive emotion regulation, it is common to either let participants passively view emotional stimuli without any further specific instructions or to instruct them to actively attend to and permit any arising emotions, and to contrast one of these baseline conditions with a regulation condition. While the view strategy can be assumed to allow for a more spontaneous emotional response, the permit strategy may result in a more pronounced affective and cognitive response. As these conceptual differences may be associated with differences both in subjective emotional experience and neural activation, we compared these two common control conditions within a single functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment, during which participants were instructed to either passively view a set of unpleasant and neutral pictures or to actively permit any emotions arising in response to the unpleasant pictures. Trial-by-trial ratings confirmed that participants perceived the unpleasant pictures as more arousing than the neutral pictures, but also indicated higher subjective arousal during the permit negative as compared to the view negative and view neutral conditions. While both the permit negative and view negative conditions led to increased activation of the bilateral amygdala when contrasted with the passive viewing of neutral pictures, activation in the left amygdala was increased in response to the permit instruction as compared to the view instruction for unpleasant pictures. The increase in amygdala activation in both the permit and view conditions renders both strategies as suitable baseline conditions for studies of cognitive emotion regulation. Conceptual and activation differences, however, indicate that these two variants are not exchangeable and should be chosen depending on the experimental context.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00347/fullAmygdalaEmotion RegulationfMRIinstructionbaseline condition
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kersten eDiers
Fanny eWeber
Burkhard eBrocke
Alexander eStrobel
Sabine eSchönfeld
spellingShingle Kersten eDiers
Fanny eWeber
Burkhard eBrocke
Alexander eStrobel
Sabine eSchönfeld
Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
Frontiers in Psychology
Amygdala
Emotion Regulation
fMRI
instruction
baseline condition
author_facet Kersten eDiers
Fanny eWeber
Burkhard eBrocke
Alexander eStrobel
Sabine eSchönfeld
author_sort Kersten eDiers
title Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
title_short Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
title_full Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
title_fullStr Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
title_full_unstemmed Instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
title_sort instructions matter: a comparison of baseline conditions for cognitive emotion regulation paradigms
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-04-01
description The choice of a meaningful baseline condition is a crucial issue for each experimental design. In the case of cognitive emotion regulation, it is common to either let participants passively view emotional stimuli without any further specific instructions or to instruct them to actively attend to and permit any arising emotions, and to contrast one of these baseline conditions with a regulation condition. While the view strategy can be assumed to allow for a more spontaneous emotional response, the permit strategy may result in a more pronounced affective and cognitive response. As these conceptual differences may be associated with differences both in subjective emotional experience and neural activation, we compared these two common control conditions within a single functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment, during which participants were instructed to either passively view a set of unpleasant and neutral pictures or to actively permit any emotions arising in response to the unpleasant pictures. Trial-by-trial ratings confirmed that participants perceived the unpleasant pictures as more arousing than the neutral pictures, but also indicated higher subjective arousal during the permit negative as compared to the view negative and view neutral conditions. While both the permit negative and view negative conditions led to increased activation of the bilateral amygdala when contrasted with the passive viewing of neutral pictures, activation in the left amygdala was increased in response to the permit instruction as compared to the view instruction for unpleasant pictures. The increase in amygdala activation in both the permit and view conditions renders both strategies as suitable baseline conditions for studies of cognitive emotion regulation. Conceptual and activation differences, however, indicate that these two variants are not exchangeable and should be chosen depending on the experimental context.
topic Amygdala
Emotion Regulation
fMRI
instruction
baseline condition
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00347/full
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