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Naturalistic Stimuli in Affective Neuroimaging: A Review

Heini Saarimäki

2021Frontiers in Human Neuroscience140 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Naturalistic stimuli such as movies, music, and spoken and written stories elicit strong emotions and allow brain imaging of emotions in close-to-real-life conditions. Emotions are multi-component phenomena: relevant stimuli lead to automatic changes in multiple functional components including perception, physiology, behavior, and conscious experiences. Brain activity during naturalistic stimuli reflects all these changes, suggesting that parsing emotion-related processing during such complex stimulation is not a straightforward task. Here, I review affective neuroimaging studies that have employed naturalistic stimuli to study emotional processing, focusing especially on experienced emotions. I argue that to investigate emotions with naturalistic stimuli, we need to define and extract emotion features from both the stimulus and the observer.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyNeuroimagingPerceptionStimulus (psychology)Cognitive psychologyNaturalismFunctional neuroimagingFunctional magnetic resonance imagingBrain activity and meditationNeuroscienceElectroencephalographyPhilosophyEpistemologyNeural and Behavioral Psychology StudiesFace Recognition and PerceptionEmotion and Mood Recognition