Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses

Appropriate processing of human voices with different threat-related emotions is of evolutionarily adaptive value for the survival of individuals. Nevertheless, it is still not clear whether the sensitivity to threat-related information is present at birth. Using an oddball paradigm, the current stu...

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Main Authors: Dandan eZhang, Yunzhe eLiu, xinlin ehou, guoyu esun, yawei echeng, yuejia eluo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00422/full
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spelling doaj-e7b6334a2ebf4665aa6bf6948f8cce7a2020-11-24T20:44:59ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience1662-51532014-12-01810.3389/fnbeh.2014.00422123210Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain ResponsesDandan eZhang0Yunzhe eLiu1xinlin ehou2guoyu esun3yawei echeng4yuejia eluo5Shenzhen UniversityShenzhen UniversityPeking University First HospitalPeking University First HospitalYang-Ming UniversityShenzhen UniversityAppropriate processing of human voices with different threat-related emotions is of evolutionarily adaptive value for the survival of individuals. Nevertheless, it is still not clear whether the sensitivity to threat-related information is present at birth. Using an oddball paradigm, the current study investigated the neural correlates underlying automatic processing of emotional voices of fear and anger in sleeping neonates. Event-related potential data showed that the frontocentral scalp distribution of the neonatal brain could discriminate fearful voices from angry voices; the mismatch response (MMR) was larger in response to the deviant stimuli of anger, compared with the standard stimuli of fear. Furthermore, this fear-anger MMR discrimination was observed only when neonates were in active sleep state. Although the neonates’ sensitivity to threat-related voices is not likely associated with a conceptual understanding of fearful and angry emotions, this special discrimination in early life may provide a foundation for later emotion and social cognition development.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00422/fullAngerFearneonatemismatch responsethreat-relatedEmotional voice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dandan eZhang
Yunzhe eLiu
xinlin ehou
guoyu esun
yawei echeng
yuejia eluo
spellingShingle Dandan eZhang
Yunzhe eLiu
xinlin ehou
guoyu esun
yawei echeng
yuejia eluo
Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
Anger
Fear
neonate
mismatch response
threat-related
Emotional voice
author_facet Dandan eZhang
Yunzhe eLiu
xinlin ehou
guoyu esun
yawei echeng
yuejia eluo
author_sort Dandan eZhang
title Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
title_short Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
title_full Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
title_fullStr Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
title_full_unstemmed Discrimination of Fearful and Angry Emotional Voices in Sleeping Human Neonates: a Study of the Mismatch Brain Responses
title_sort discrimination of fearful and angry emotional voices in sleeping human neonates: a study of the mismatch brain responses
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
issn 1662-5153
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Appropriate processing of human voices with different threat-related emotions is of evolutionarily adaptive value for the survival of individuals. Nevertheless, it is still not clear whether the sensitivity to threat-related information is present at birth. Using an oddball paradigm, the current study investigated the neural correlates underlying automatic processing of emotional voices of fear and anger in sleeping neonates. Event-related potential data showed that the frontocentral scalp distribution of the neonatal brain could discriminate fearful voices from angry voices; the mismatch response (MMR) was larger in response to the deviant stimuli of anger, compared with the standard stimuli of fear. Furthermore, this fear-anger MMR discrimination was observed only when neonates were in active sleep state. Although the neonates’ sensitivity to threat-related voices is not likely associated with a conceptual understanding of fearful and angry emotions, this special discrimination in early life may provide a foundation for later emotion and social cognition development.
topic Anger
Fear
neonate
mismatch response
threat-related
Emotional voice
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnbeh.2014.00422/full
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