Emotional learning promotes perceptual predictions by remodeling stimulus representation in visual cortex

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Abstract

Emotions exert powerful effects on perception and memory, notably by modulating activity in sensory cortices so as to capture attention. Here, we examine whether emotional significance acquired by a visual stimulus can also change its cortical representation by linking neuronal populations coding for different memorized versions of the same stimulus, a mechanism that would facilitate recognition across different appearances. Using fMRI, we show that after pairing a given face with threat through conditioning, viewing this face activates the representation of another viewpoint of the same person, which itself was never conditioned, leading to robust repetition-priming across viewpoints in the ventral visual stream (including medial fusiform, lateral occipital, and anterior temporal cortex). We also observed a functional-anatomical segregation for coding view-invariant and view-specific identity information. These results indicate emotional signals may induce plasticity of stimulus representations in visual cortex, serving to generate new sensory predictions about different appearances of threat-associated stimuli.

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Meaux, E., Sterpenich, V., & Vuilleumier, P. (2019). Emotional learning promotes perceptual predictions by remodeling stimulus representation in visual cortex. Scientific Reports, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-52615-6

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