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University News

Contact:
Gerry Everding - (314) 935-6375
gerry_everding@aismail.wustl.edu
Study ties mental abilities to interaction of emotion
and cognitive skills

[St. Louis, MO., 3-18-02]

In a study of how human emotional states influence higher
mental abilities, cognitive neuroscientists at Washington
University in St. Louis have shown that watching even
just 10 minutes of classic horror films or prime-time
television comedies can have a
significant short-term influence on areas of the brain
critical for reasoning, intelligence, and other types
of higher cognition.
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Participants in the study had more activity in the prefrontal cortex when doing either a word-based task in an anxious mood, or when doing a face-based task in a pleasant mood. In these conditions, which the participants found more difficult, the two brain areas shown in yellow appeared to be working harder, as shown by greater activity. The same regions were less active -- and possibly more efficient -- during either the word task in a pleasant mood or the face task in an anxious mood. |
"To have the best mental
performance and the most efficient
pattern of brain activity, you
need a match between the type
of mood you are in and the type
of task you are doing," said
Jeremy Gray, Ph.D., a Research
Scientist in the Psychology Department
in Arts & Sciences and lead
author of the study. "This
is one of the first studies to
really show that performance and
brain activity are a product of
an equal partnership or marriage
between our emotional states and
higher cognition."
Scheduled for publication March 19 in Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences, the study is
co-authored by Gray and Washington University colleagues
Todd Braver, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology
in Arts & Sciences and director of the laboratory
where the study was conducted, and Marcus Raichle,
M.D., professor of radiology, neurology, anatomy and
neurobiology in the School of Medicine.
"Our results suggest that emotion is not a second-class
citizen in the world of the brain," Gray said.
"The findings surprise people. Mild anxiety actually
improved performance on some kinds of difficult tasks,
but hurt performance on others. Being in a pleasant
mood boosted some kinds of performance but impaired
other kinds. To understand how a particular emotion
or mood will influence performance, you have to take
into account the type of task. Our results show that
the brain takes it into account."
Using a sophisticated technique called functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), Gray and colleagues
recorded brain activity as people performed difficult
cognitive tasks just after watching short, emotional
videos. The lingering effects of the videos had remarkably
specific influences on the levels of brain activity.
A region of the prefrontal cortex was jointly influenced
by a combination of mood state and cognitive task,
but not by either one alone. Located just under the
temples and slightly higher, near the corner of the
forehead, this area had been previously thought to
be critical for higher mental functions. However,
the current work suggests that the region may actually
be critical for integrating cognitive tasks together
with emotional signals.
"The patterns of activity in this area suggested
that it plays a regulatory role, because it responded
to the changes in subjective difficulty imposed by
the various emotion-cognition combinations,"
Braver said. "Our evidence for this is that the
activity in this region was correlated with behavioral
performance, such that stronger activity may have
helped to reduce the influence that emotion had on
modulating behavior.
"We believe that this is the first study to show
that specific brain regions mediate these interactions
between emotional states and cognition," Braver
added. "Moreover, the findings seem to refute
our common sense notions about these interactions
-- for example, that bad moods are always detrimental
for cognition; good moods are always beneficial."
In the study, 14 college-aged men and women were shown
a series of short video clips, which elicited one
of three emotional states: pleasant, neutral or anxious.
Pleasant moods were induced by viewing television
comedies, such as "Candid Camera" (1985);
and anxious moods followed the viewing of cult horror
classics, namely the movies "Halloween"
(1978, 1989) and "Scream" (1996).
After a particular series of clips, participants were
asked to perform a difficult cognitive task requiring
the active retention of information in short-term
or "working" memory. Essentially, participants
were shown a series of either words or unfamiliar
faces on a computer screen, and had to indicate whether
the current word (or face, in the face task) was the
same as the one they had just seen three times back
in the series.
The experiment studied the influence of relatively
mild emotions on higher-level cognitive functions.
In real life, such conditions might result from arguing
with a spouse before leaving for work, or seeing a
gory traffic accident on the way there. How might
the lingering effects of these disturbing but not
traumatic emotional experiences influence your job
performance later in the day? Would the influence
of various emotions be different if your job is highly
verbal (defending a legal argument in court), as compared
to highly non-verbal (monitoring plane on an air traffic
control system)? The research suggests that the kind
of job could make a big difference.
The research was supported by the National Science
Foundation and the McDonnell Center for Higher Brain
Function at Washington University in St. Louis. |
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