Dynamic Cognitive Characteristics of Emotional Conflict in
Dynamic Cognitive Characteristics of Emotional Conflict in
Dynamic Cognitive Characteristics of Emotional Conflict in
Potential Study
Dynamic Cognitive Characteristics of Emotional Conflict in
Potential Study
subjects, completed the word-face Stroop paradigm, with ERP amplitudes and
latencies recorded.
Results: The SubD group displayed lower accuracy and prolonged response
the N450 amplitude was greater in the prefrontal middle region for
amplitude was smaller in the parieto-occipital region for the same contrast.
Introduction
Unraveling the factors that elevate the risk of MDD is essential for effective
symptomatic similarities with MDD but to a lesser extent and without meeting
diagnostic criteria (Dai Q et al., 2012; Hayasaka Y et al., 2015), has emerged as a
quality of life (Lee, Y. et al., 2019; Tuithof, M. et al., 2018). Particularly vulnerable
among adolescents (Bertha and Balazs, 2013), SubD's prevalence is evident among
Chinese university students (32%) (Jiang et al., 2019) and European college students
(23%-39%) (Mikolajczyk et al., 2008). SubD acts as a risk factor for depression, with
a 10-25% risk of progression to MDD within 1-3 years (Cuijpers and Smit, 2004).
environment, interfering with ongoing behaviors (LeDoux JE, 2000; Tipples J and
Sharma D, 2000).
unrelated stimuli with ongoing cognitive tasks (Etkin A et al., 2006). Individuals with
inability to resolve and adapt to emotional conflicts (Williams JM, 1996; Xue S,
reaction times and lower accuracy in naming the colors of sad words in an emotional
Methodological Approach
Most prior investigations of emotional conflict have employed the emotional Stroop
paradigm, but this paradigm fails to elicit genuine emotional conflict between the
emotional content of words and color names (Algom et al., 2004). The word-face
approach for studying emotional conflict, allowing for a direct assessment. In this
paradigm, emotional words are presented on emotionally colored faces, and subjects
are tasked with evaluating the emotional value of the face or word (Stenberg et al.,
Previous studies have shown that the event-related potential (ERP) technique
is used widely. It is a technique with high temporal resolution that compensates for
widely employed for its high temporal resolution, previous studies employing the
word-face Stroop paradigm revealed that incongruent stimuli evoked a more negative
frontal central region appears to be associated with emotion control and conflict
detection (Thomas et al., 2007; van Hooff et al., 2008). Furthermore, word-face
incongruent stimuli produced a more negative N450 component in the central frontal
region 300-500ms after presentation, indicating conflict detection in the Stroop task
(Coderre, Conklin, & van Heuven, 2011). The left midline region exhibited the
greatest amplitude for early N450 (350-450ms), while the central midline region
showed the highest amplitude for late N450 (450-500ms). This suggests that early and
(Taake et al., 2009; Wei et al., 2010).Additionally, conflict slow potential (SP), a
positive component sensitive to conflict, emerges over parietal areas during the 700-
attention has been given to individuals with SubD. Investigating emotional conflict in
SubD patients is crucial for understanding mechanisms and informing diagnosis and
treatment.
Hypotheses
Behaviorally, we anticipate the SubD group to exhibit prolonged reaction times (RT)
and reduced accuracy (ACC) compared to the Healthy Control (HC) group.
patients, including an overall increase in N2, N450, and SP amplitude levels during
In summary, our study aims to bridge the research gap by investigating the dynamic
cognitive processes in SubD patients during an emotional conflict task, utilizing ERP
technology and the word-face Stroop paradigm. The anticipated findings may
adaptations and had been widely used. The SubD group were screened using a cutoff
al., 2017), which is the usual way of indicating “having depressive symptoms” in
CES-D. The Hamilton Depression Scale-17 was then used to confirm SD and exclude
depression, above 25: severe depression) (Ballesteros J et al., 2007). The Hamilton
Depression Scale-17 was performed by at least two assessors, at least one of whom
training in the assessment's administration. The inclusion criteria for the HC group
were CES-D score of < 16. Exclusion Criteria for both SubD and HC participants
were (1) did not fulfill the SCID diagnostic criteria for MDD; (2) had no current
psychotherapy and psychotropic medication; and (4)not pregnant and currently not in
All participants were right-handed, and at the time of the experiment, the SubD
group was not receiving medication or was entering the experiment 1 month after
carefully informed of the purpose of the experiment and the procedure and signed an
informed consent form. The study was conducted in accordance with the Declaration
of Helsinki as revised in 1989. The subjects were compensated after completing all
study procedures.
Experimental material
people. All photographs were selected from the Native Chinese Affective Picture
System (Lu B et al., 2005), which has been deemed to be appropriate for use with the
according to a 1:1 sex ratio and used red font for the words “ 高兴 (‘ gaoxing’ means
happy)” or “ 悲伤 (‘beishang’ means sad)” over the central portion of the faces in the
photographs. The text appears on the nose area of the face and the font size is
there are two conditions (congruent, incongruent), congruent in the sense that the
facial expression in the picture agrees with the meaning of the word, and incongruent
in the sense that the facial expression does not agree with the meaning of the word
The image was eventually rendered on a 17 inch CRT computer screen, measuring
5cm by 7cm.
Experimental Paradigm
The word-face Stroop paradigm was used in this study. For the specific experimental
design, refer to the study by Song Xue et al (Xue, S et al., 2017). The entire
experiment comprised one practical trial and four blocks, with each block consisting
of 80 trials. After completing a block, the participants were provided 1-2 minutes of
rest. When the experiment started, one photograph containing an emotional face and
an emotional word was shown in the middle of the screen for 1500ms. The stimulus
time interval was between 3000ms and 5000ms (average: 4000ms), and the central
For the congruent and incongruent tasks in this study, the experimenters asked
the participants to determine whether the face was sad or happy and to press a button
in response as soon as possible. The participants were instructed to press the “S”
button with their left-hand finger when the face appeared sad and the “K” button with
their right-hand finger when the face appeared happy. The order of the stimuli was
pseudo-random, and all experimental stimuli, as well as the sex of the faces, were
balanced. The picture presentation was ended once the participant pressed the correct
button or after 1500ms had elapsed. A blank screen was then presented for 800 to
1200ms. In total , 160 trials were recorded for each type of stimuli. The whole
The experiment was conducted in a quiet environment, using two computers, one
for presenting the stimuli and one for recording the EEG data. During the experiment,
subjects were asked to minimise body movements, especially head and facial
movements. The subjects were asked to look at the screen with their eyes, their faces
75 cm away from the screen and their horizontal and vertical viewing angles less than
68 degrees. In order to ensure that the subjects were sufficiently familiar with the
whole procedure, a 20-trial pretest was conducted before the formal start of the
experiment, and the pre-test procedure was the same as in the formal experiment.
EEG Recording
The electrode cap is distributed according to the international 10/20 system, and the
sampling rate is 512Hz. After the original signal is amplified, a bandpass filter (0.01-
100Hz) is applied. EEG data were collected using a Biosemi (Biosemi, UvA, NL)
ActiveTwo Data Conversion Box. Impedances were kept below 5 kΩ throughout the
recording. The preprocessing and analysis of the EEG data was performed in Matlab
(version R2014a; MathWorks, Inc, MA, USA) using the EEGlab toolbox (Delorme
and Makeig, 2004), the ERPlab toolbox (Lopez-Calderon and Luck, 2014).
The electrodes were referenced to the CMS (Figure 2.) during acquisition and the
REST was used as the offline reference, with the study shows that it is more
outside of the left and the right canthi to measure the electrooculogram. Ocular
artefacts were corrected using the independent component analysis (ICA) procedure
in the EEGlab toolbox (Delorme and Makeig,2004). The offline high-pass filter is set
to 0.1 and the low-pass filter is set to 35 Hz, with a band-pass filter to improve the
signal-to-noise ratio. The data 200 ms before the start of the stimulus is used for the
baseline correction of the ERP. The continuous EEG is divided into the period starting
-200 ms before the start of the stimulus and ending at 1000 ms after the start of the
stimulus. Tests exceeding ±100μV are excluded from further analysis. Epochs
containing artefacts were rejected prior to averaging. The average number of accepted
trials was 145 (SD=6) in the word-face emotion consistency condition, 151 (SD=4) in
150~250ms, 350~450ms and 700~800ms time windows. We chose the above time
included the 150~250ms time window to capture the N2 effect, the 350~450ms to
capture the N450 effect, and the 700~800ms time window to capture the SP effect.
this study, N2 and N450 in the central prefrontal region and SP in the posterior central
region of the parieto-occipital lobe were selected for analysis. Three electrode sites,
FZ, FPZ and FCZ, were selected for analysis with average wave amplitudes of N2 and
N450 in the central prefrontal region, and three electrode sites, PZ, POZ and OZ, were
selected for analysis with average wave amplitudes of SP in the posterior central
and X2 test were used to compare the demographic data and depression scales (CES-
The E-prime procedure was used to record subject reaction time (RT)of correctly
and the accuracy of responses (ACC) spss 22 to analyse these behavioural data. A
two factor repeated measure ANOVA with RT and ACC as dependent variables,
respectively, was used to examine the group (SubD vs HC) as the between-subject
A three-factor repeated measure ANOVA was used to examine the latencies and
amplitudes of N2, N450 and SP, with the group (SubD vs HC) as the between-subject
factor, and word-face consistency (congruent vs incongruent) ×electrode point (N2
(FZ, FPZ, FCZ); N450(FZ, FPZ, FCZ);SP(PZ, POZ, OZ) as the within-subject
factor. The normality of data was checked before applying parametric tests. The
violated the sphericity assumption, and the Bonferroni correction was applied to all
RESULTS
Demographic Characteristics
Demographic data for subjects in the HC group and SubD group are shown in Table
1. The mean age was 19.813±0.859 years in the SubD group and 19.563±0.759 years
in the HC group. The two groups were no statistically significant differences on the
P=0.880) dimensions, showing that the two groups were well matched. In contrast, as
SD HC
Variable (n=32) (n=32) Statistics P
Gender
10/22 12/20 χ2 =0.549 0.443
(male/female)
Age
19.813±0.859 19.563±0.759 t=-1.233 0.222
(years)
Education
10.169±0.941 10.203±0.879 t=0.151 0.880
(years)
CES-D 28.173±9.863 8.168±3.905 t=22.504 <0.001
HAMD-17 10.253±3.393 —‡ —* —*
‡: The HAMD-17 was not administered in the HC after screening with the CES-D.
*: Group comparisons are not required.
CES-D: Center for Epidemiological Survey, Depression Scale.
HAMD-17: Hamilton Depression Scale-17; HC, healthy control.
RT was used as a dependent variable to analyze the repeated measures of ANOVA for
incongruent). The results showed that the main effect of group was significant (F
(1,62) =17.431, P<0.001), and the main effect of word-face emotion consistency was
significant (F (1,62) =67.937, P<0.001), and the interaction between them was
that the SubD group’s RT under the condition of word-face emotion inconsistency
was significantly greater than the word-face emotion consistency (F (1,62) =8.242,
P<0.001), and the HC group’s RT under the condition of emotional inconsistency is
also significantly greater than the word-face emotional agreement F (1,62) =3.312,
P<0.001).
Then, ACC was used as a dependent variable to analyze the repeated measures of
(congruent vs incongruent). The results showed that the main effect of group was
significant (F (1,62) = 5.690, p<0.001), and the main effect of word-face emotion
consistency was significant (F (1,62) = 96.916, p < 0.001), other effects were not
significant. After pair-wise comparison, it was found that the ACC of SubD group
was lower than that of HC group, and under consistent was higher than that under
inconsistent.
Abbreviations: SubD, Subthreshold depression; HC, Healthy control; RT, response time; ACC,
accuracy score.
ERP Results
N2
The latencies and amplitudes of N2 were statistically analyzed. Please see Table 3 and
P<0.001)with the largest amplitudes in the FZ and the smallest amplitudes in the FPZ.
P=0.022<0.05) , with smaller amplitudes in the HC group than in the SubD group.
amplitudes than the HC group in each type of word-face emotion consistency stimuli.
with smaller latencies in the FCZ compared with both the FPZ and the FZ. There was
P=0.497).
Task Group P7 O1 OZ
N450
The amplitudes and latencies of N450 were statistically analyzed. Please see Table 4
and Figure 4 for details. The ANOVA on N450 amplitudes showed a main effect of
P<0.001 ) with the largest amplitudes in the FZ and the smallest amplitudes in the
SubD group. There was a main effect of word-face emotion consistency (congruent=-
there was a trend interaction between group and word-face emotion consistency (F
(1,31) =5.051, P=0.032<0.05), further analysis of the simple effect showed that the
HC group than in the SubD group. There was no main effect of word-face emotion
(F(1,31)=1.818,P=0.187).
TABLE 4. Description for N450 Amplitude (μV) and Latency (ms) (Mean±SD)
Task Group P7 O1 OZ
The amplitudes and latencies of SP were statistically analyzed. Please see Table 5 and
Figure 4 for details. The ANOVA on SP amplitudes showed a main effect of electrode
the largest amplitudes in the PZ and the smallest amplitudes in the POZ. There was a
P=0.040<0.05), with smaller amplitudes in the SubD group than in the HC group.
incongruent=1.107μV; F (1,31) =36.627, P<0.001), and it was found that there was a
P<0.001), further analysis of the simple effect showed that the SubD group had a
group=0.543μV; P<0.001).
The ANOVA on SP latencies showed all the effective effects are not significant.
Discussion
Emotional conflict is a cognitive process in which we need to select our target
information, and the resolution of emotional conflict has great significance in real life.
interference effect. Both the SubD and HC groups had longer RTs in the incongruent
condition than in the congruent condition when completing the emotional conflict
task. This is consistent with the findings of Botvinic (Botvinick MM et al., 2004),
who identified stronger activation in the prefrontal as well as the cingulate cortex in
during response. Previous research (Etkin et al., 2006) has suggested that this is due to
valence is in conflict, word and face competition for cognitive resources, such as
attention, and the resources taken up by processes such as recognition and processing
of non-target stimuli can interfere with processes such as recognition and processing
of target stimuli, and in turn make them less efficient. This study also found that the
SubD group had significantly longer RT and lower ACC rates in both conditions
compared to the HC group, suggesting that SubD may have deficits in the cognitive
processes of emotional conflict.
Regarding the ERP data, the SubD group had greater N2 amplitude in the
frontocentral region and greater N450 difference wave amplitude in the frontocentral
group. The SubD patients and HC group showed enhanced conflict SP for
“incongruent stimuli” than for “congruent stimuli,” and the HC group showed greater
SP difference wave amplitude for “incongruent stimuli minus congruent stimuli” than
the SubD patients. This, combined with the longer RT and lower ACC behavioural
data during the task, suggests that SubD patients have neurological impairments in
For N2, the subject type main effect was significant, showing a larger wave
amplitude in the SubD group than in the HC group. N2 reflects the state of attention at
the beginning of the entire cognitive processing, and the results suggest that SubD
patients are more sensitive to the early processing of emotional stimuli than normal
individuals. The present study did not find differences in the conflict condition,
but previous studies found that the N2 amplitude of incongruent stimuli was greater
than the N2 amplitude of congruent stimuli in the interference task (Gehring WJ et al.,
1992; Kopp B et al., 1996; Holmes AJ et al., 2008), possibly because previous studies
have mostly used the classical Stroop or go-nogo paradigms, whereas the present
study used the word-face Stroop paradigm. Previous studies (Zhang JP et al.,
2021) have shown that people with SubD pay different attention to emotional
information than normal people and engage with emotional information to a greater
extent, so the N2 amplitude was more negative in the SubD group, reflecting the fact
that people with SubD require more cognitive resources to process emotional
information.
For N450, the main effect of conflict type was significant, and waves in the
incongruent condition had a greater turn in the frontal mid-lobe region than waves in
the congruent condition. N450 is a valid indicator of the Stroop interference effect
(Shen YM et al., 2013 ), and the findings suggest that there was a significant Stroop
interference effect in this study. The main effect of subject type was significant, with
the SubD group eliciting more negative N450 compared to the HC group, and an
interaction effect between subject type and conflict type was found, with further
simple effects analysis showing that the incongruent condition minus the more
congruent condition elicited greater N450 in the SubD group than in the HC
devotes to conflict events (West R et al., 2005), and this study shows that people with
SubD have low conflict processing efficiency and high interference sensitivity. It has
also been suggested that N450 may be related to conflict monitoring (Liotti M et al.,
2000; West R et al., 2003) and conflict resolution. For example, Qiu et al. (Qiu NJ et
al., 2006) in a colour-word Stroop study using Chinese characters as materials found
with the facial word Stroop task. The greater wave of difference in N450 in the SubD
group implies that SubD patients are more sensitive to the detection of emotional
conflict.
For SP, a main effect of conflict type was significant, with incongruent
conditions triggering greater SP than congruent conditions. Subject type main effects
were evident, with the SubD group triggering smaller SP amplitudes than the HC
group, which differed from the hypothesis, and an interaction effect between subject
type and conflict type was found, with the SubD group inducing smaller waves of
group. Many studies (Whitney C et al., 2009; Clayson PE et al., 2011; Forster SE et
al., 2011) have linked the slow wave of conflict SP to post-response monitoring and
conflict adaptation. For example, Chen et al. (Chen A et al., 2011) suggest that
beyond the mean response time. Larson et al. (M.J. Larson et al., 2009) suggest that
completion of an emotional conflict task. The results of the present study imply that
adaptation and response monitoring are more delayed in people with SubD following
Research has shown that the inability to resolve and adapt to emotional conflict
is typical of patients with certain mood disorders. The present study provides new
behavioural and neurophysiological evidence for impaired emotional conflict control
in patients with SubD. The findings suggest that, compared to the HC group, SubD
patients have abnormal emotional conflict inhibition using the Word-Face Stroop
but delayed adaptation and response selection following emotional conflict. On the
one hand, these findings help us to enhance our understanding of SubD inhibition
defects, on the other hand, they also provide evidence on the cognitive