2010
DOI: 10.1080/87565640903526504
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Event-Related Potentials, Emotion, and Emotion Regulation: An Integrative Review

Abstract: Progress in the study of emotion and emotion regulation has increasingly been informed by neuroscientific methods. This article focuses on two components of the event-related potential (ERP)--the P300 and the late positive potential (LPP)--and how they can be used to understand the interaction between the more automatic and controlled processing of emotional stimuli. Research is reviewed exploring: the dynamics of emotional response as indexed at early and late latencies; neurobiological correlates of emotiona… Show more

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Cited by 1,066 publications
(1,063 citation statements)
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“…Whilst the P3 is thought to reflect the allocation of attention toward task-relevant and emotionally salient stimuli (Keil et al, 2002;Polich, 2007), the late positive potential (LPP), extending outside the latency of P3 well beyond 1000 ms, reflects continued emotion stimulus processing. Research investigating the LPP in this context illustrates its sensitivity to emotional content, with larger amplitudes to emotional than neutral stimuli (Cuthbert, Schupp, Bradley, Birbaumer, & Lang, 2000;Hajcak, Dunning, & Foti, 2009;Hajcak, MacNamara, & Olvet, 2010;Hajcak & Olvet, 2008;Schupp et al, 2000;Schupp, Junghöfer, Weike, & Hamm, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst the P3 is thought to reflect the allocation of attention toward task-relevant and emotionally salient stimuli (Keil et al, 2002;Polich, 2007), the late positive potential (LPP), extending outside the latency of P3 well beyond 1000 ms, reflects continued emotion stimulus processing. Research investigating the LPP in this context illustrates its sensitivity to emotional content, with larger amplitudes to emotional than neutral stimuli (Cuthbert, Schupp, Bradley, Birbaumer, & Lang, 2000;Hajcak, Dunning, & Foti, 2009;Hajcak, MacNamara, & Olvet, 2010;Hajcak & Olvet, 2008;Schupp et al, 2000;Schupp, Junghöfer, Weike, & Hamm, 2004).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Past ERP studies quantify P3 and LPP components in relation to various experimental paradigms in different time windows (see Olofsson et al, 2008). Importantly, both peak and area measures of P3 and LPP components can be indifferent to component overlap and thus complicate further the specific distinction of components that share spatial and temporal features (Hajcak, MacNamara, & Olvet, 2010). However, the longer duration, which has been also observed in the current results, of the LPP suggests at least some temporal distinction from the P3.…”
Section: Theoretical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 47%
“…Past EEG studies suggest that LPP reflects sustained attention allocation and motivational significance to salient relevant stimuli (Hajcak, MacNamara, & Olvet, 2010;Pozharliev et al, 2015). Enhanced LPP amplitude was found in relation to visual stimuli that were perceived as silent due to specific task context, such as targets (Azizian, Freitas, Parvaz, & Squires, 2006).…”
Section: Event-related Potentialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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