Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.

Humor processing involves distinct processing stages including incongruity detection, emotional response, and engagement of mesolimbic reward regions. Dysfunctional reward processing and clinical symptoms in response to humor have been previously described in both hypocretin deficient narcolepsy-cat...

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Main Authors: Armand Mensen, Rositsa Poryazova, Sophie Schwartz, Ramin Khatami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3906016?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-fd1b41dd1c7247c08aba4b77666ad3312020-11-24T21:43:49ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0191e8597810.1371/journal.pone.0085978Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.Armand MensenRositsa PoryazovaSophie SchwartzRamin KhatamiHumor processing involves distinct processing stages including incongruity detection, emotional response, and engagement of mesolimbic reward regions. Dysfunctional reward processing and clinical symptoms in response to humor have been previously described in both hypocretin deficient narcolepsy-cataplexy (NC) and in idiopathic Parkinson disease (PD). For NC patients, humor is the strongest trigger for cataplexy, a transient loss of muscle tone, whereas dopamine-deficient PD-patients show blunted emotional responses to humor. To better understand the role of reward system and the various contributions of hypocretinergic and dopaminergic mechanisms to different stages of humor processing we examined the electrophysiological response to humorous and neutral pictures when given as reward feedback in PD, NC and healthy controls. Humor compared to neutral feedback demonstrated modulation of early ERP amplitudes likely corresponding to visual processing stages, with no group differences. At 270 ms post-feedback, conditions showed topographical and amplitudinal differences for frontal and left posterior electrodes, in that humor feedback was absent in PD patients but increased in NC patients. We suggest that this effect relates to a relatively early affective response, reminiscent of increased amygdala response reported in NC patients. Later ERP differences, corresponding to the late positive potential, revealed a lack of sustained activation in PD, likely due to altered dopamine regulation in reward structures in these patients. This research provides new insights into the temporal dynamics and underlying mechanisms of humor detection and appreciation in health and disease.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3906016?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Armand Mensen
Rositsa Poryazova
Sophie Schwartz
Ramin Khatami
spellingShingle Armand Mensen
Rositsa Poryazova
Sophie Schwartz
Ramin Khatami
Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Armand Mensen
Rositsa Poryazova
Sophie Schwartz
Ramin Khatami
author_sort Armand Mensen
title Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
title_short Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
title_full Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
title_fullStr Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
title_full_unstemmed Humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
title_sort humor as a reward mechanism: event-related potentials in the healthy and diseased brain.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Humor processing involves distinct processing stages including incongruity detection, emotional response, and engagement of mesolimbic reward regions. Dysfunctional reward processing and clinical symptoms in response to humor have been previously described in both hypocretin deficient narcolepsy-cataplexy (NC) and in idiopathic Parkinson disease (PD). For NC patients, humor is the strongest trigger for cataplexy, a transient loss of muscle tone, whereas dopamine-deficient PD-patients show blunted emotional responses to humor. To better understand the role of reward system and the various contributions of hypocretinergic and dopaminergic mechanisms to different stages of humor processing we examined the electrophysiological response to humorous and neutral pictures when given as reward feedback in PD, NC and healthy controls. Humor compared to neutral feedback demonstrated modulation of early ERP amplitudes likely corresponding to visual processing stages, with no group differences. At 270 ms post-feedback, conditions showed topographical and amplitudinal differences for frontal and left posterior electrodes, in that humor feedback was absent in PD patients but increased in NC patients. We suggest that this effect relates to a relatively early affective response, reminiscent of increased amygdala response reported in NC patients. Later ERP differences, corresponding to the late positive potential, revealed a lack of sustained activation in PD, likely due to altered dopamine regulation in reward structures in these patients. This research provides new insights into the temporal dynamics and underlying mechanisms of humor detection and appreciation in health and disease.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3906016?pdf=render
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