
Lecture 4: Emotions & Neurophysiology
What is Neurophysiology?
It studies the interaction between the brain and body through the nervous system
The nervous system consists of:
- Central nervous system – the brain and the spinal chord
- Ganglion cells - cells that connect peripheral with central nervous system
- Peripheral nervous system - Nerves connecting organs, muscles & spinal cord
Acetylcholine (Ach):
- Neurotransmitter (transmits signals from cell to cell)
- Located in:
- central nervous system, acting as a neuromodulator (most abundant neurotransmitter)
- peripheral nervous system to activate muscles
- Transmits signals between motor nerves and skeletal muscles
- Alterations in the receptors found in: Parkinson and Alzheimer's diseases, schizophrenia, depression, epilepsy, diabetes, respiration disorders, some immunological disorders
- Nicotine exerts its biological effects through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. In ex-smokers, nicotinic receptors take over a month to normalize.
Autonomic nervous system:
- Composed by the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system
- Sympathetic: fight or flight
- Parasympathetic: rest and digest
- Artery: only sympathetic
- Bladder: controlled by both systems. There is inhibition from the frontal lobe, but the limbic-system takes over when scared
Physiological example measures:
- Pupillometry
- Skin Conductance (Galvanic, electrodermal)
- Heart rate, Variability (HRV, IBI)
- Blood pressure (systolic, diastolic)
- Startle response, blinks (EMG)
- Respiration
Why study physiology in neuroscience and psychology?
- to understand how the brain controls the body (and vice versa)
- because physiological signals may serve as objective measures of cognition & emotion
Unconscious body effect
- Test strength of visual masks on subjective (was there a spider?) and objective measures (SCR) in phobic persons
- Unconscious stimuli can alter physiological response
Emotions & Physiology
The eyes
- Salient contrast between pupil, iris, and sclera (eye white) suggests purpose
- Both sympathetic and parasympathetic
- The iris has two muscles: the sphincter pupillae (decreases pupil size) and the dilator pupillae (increases pupil size)
- With the constriction of the pupils, acetylcholine is released
- With the dilation of pupils noradrenaline/norepinephrine is released
- What dilated pupils could mean – something stimulating:
- “I’m interested in what’s happening”
- “I’m attracted to something”
- “I have confidence”…
- What constricted pupils could mean:
- “I’m bored”
- “My mind is not working very hard”
- “I’m disgusted”…
Skin conductance
- Skin resistance changes because of sympathetic activation of endocrine sweat glands
- A patient with impaired amygdala has no skin conductance response to a conditioned stimulus, but he/she does for an unconditioned stimulus
- Skin conductance response increases with fear, anger, or sexual arousal
- Skin conductance response differs for left and right hand (lateralization)
Heart rate variability
- Heart is innervated by both parasympathetic and sympathetic systems
- Acceleration in heart rate leads to release of noradrenaline/norepinephrine
- Deceleration in heart rate leads to release of Acetylcholine
- Fast changes in heart rate are induced by the parasympathetic system
- Slow changes in heart rate by sympathetic
- Incoherent heart rate rhythm pattern means stressful attitudes and emotions, like anxiety
- Coherent heart rate rhythm pattern means positive attitudes and emotions, like appreciation
Temperature
- Functional infrared thermal imaging is non-invasive, and can measure perspiration, cutaneous and subcutaneous temperature variations, blood flow, cardiac pulse, as well as metabolic breathing patterns
- Two biological mechanisms enable thermal observation of affective nature: subcutaneous vasoconstriction (see the blue nose) and emotional sweating (similar to SCR measure)
Emotions and muscles
- Physiological advantages for the expresser – the wrinkled nose prevents inspiration of potentially harmful particles – are enhanced when the movements are made early.
- Not all facial muscles appear simultaneously during facial expressions, but develop over time supporting a hierarchical biologically-basic to socially-specific information over time.
- Response of muscles in face occur in two stages:
- Early -->approach vs. avoidance (Evolution)
- Late --> distinguish six “cognitively-controlled” emotions
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This content is used in:
Emotion and cognition lecture notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 1 notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 2 notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 3 notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 4 notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 5 notes
- Emotion and Cognition - Lecture 6 notes
- Emotion and cognition: Lecture 7 notes
- Emotion and cognition: Lecture 8 notes
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