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In a number of experiments, emotional pictures elicited a frontal positive slow wave in the event-related potential (ERP). This slow wave was initially interpreted as an indes of affective information processing, but one experiment showed that this component was also elicited by emotional neutral pictures in a cognitiven processing task. The aim of the present work was to reanalyse the functional significance of this slow wave. A first section of this work presents a theoretical examination of visual pathways by the brain. This section is supplemented by an overview of the principals of ERP methodology and a review of methods to correct ocular artifacts in the ERP. A second section describes two experiments. The aim of the first experiment was to examine the hypothesis that the frontal positive slow wave is an artifact of eye movements due to the presentation of visual stimuli. This hypothesis was examined with a paradigm that facilitates a systematic variation of eye movements by the visual presentation of matrices. The aim of the second experiment was to examine the hypothesis that a mere perceptual analysis of pictures does not elicit the frontal positive slow wave, but that a content analysis of the pictures is required to elicit this component. This hypothesis was investigated by a variation of content processing demands while the pictures were presented. The results of both experiments confirmed the main hypotheses.
The stress hormone cortisol as the end-product of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis has been found to play a crucial role in the release of aggressive behavior (Kruk et al., 2004; Böhnke et al., 2010). In order to further explore potential mechanisms underlying the relationship between stress and aggression, such as changes in (social) information processing, we conducted two experimental studies that are presented in this thesis. In both studies, acute stress was induced by means of the Socially Evaluated Cold Pressor Test (SECP) designed by Schwabe et al. (2008). Stressed participants were classified as either cortisol responders or nonresponders depending on their rise in cortisol following the stressor. Moreover, basal HPA axis activity was measured prior to the experimental sessions and EEG was recorded throughout the experiments. The first study dealt with the influence of acute stress on cognitive control processes. 41 healthy male participants were assigned to either the stress condition or the non-stressful control procedure of the SECP. Before as well as after the stress induction, all participants performed a cued task-switching paradigm in order to measure cognitive control processes. Results revealed a significant influence of acute and basal cortisol levels, respectively, on the motor preparation of the upcoming behavioral response, that was reflected in changes in the magnitude of the terminal Contingent Negative Variation (CNV). In the second study, the effect of acute stress and subsequent social provocation on approach-avoidance motivation was examined. 72 healthy students (36 males, 36 females) took part in the study. They performed an approach-avoidance task, using emotional facial expressions as stimuli, before as well as after the experimental manipulation of acute stress (again via the SECP) and social provocation realized by means of the Taylor Aggression Paradigm (Taylor, 1967). Additionally to salivary cortisol, testosterone samples were collected at several points in time during the experimental session. Results indicated a positive relationship between acute testosterone levels and the motivation to approach social threat stimuli in highly provoked cortisol responders. Similar results were found when the testosterone-to-cortisol ratio at baseline was taken into account instead of acute testosterone levels. Moreover, brain activity during the approach-avoidance task was significantly influenced by acute stress and social provocation, as reflected in reductions of early (P2) as well as of later (P3) ERP components in highly provoked cortisol responders. This may indicate a less accurate, rapid processing of socially relevant stimuli due to an acute increase in cortisol and subsequent social provocation. In conclusion, the two studies presented in this thesis provide evidence for significant changes in information processing due to acute stress, basal cortisol levels and social provocation, suggesting an enhanced preparation for a rapid behavioral response in the sense of a fight-or-flight reaction. These results confirm the model of Kruk et al. (2004) proposing a mediating role of changed information processes in the stress-aggression-link.
Stress has been considered one of the most relevant factors promoting aggressive behavior. Animal and human pharmacological studies revealed the stress hormones corticosterone in rodents and cortisol in humans to constitute a particularly important neuroendocrine determinate in facilitating aggression and beyond that, assumedly in its continuation and escalation. Moreover, cortisol-induced alterations of social information processing, as well as of cognitive control processes, have been hypothesized as possible influencing factors in the stress-aggression link. So far, the immediate impact of a preceding stressor and thereby stress-induced rise of cortisol on aggressive behavior as well as higher-order cognitive control processes and social information processing in this context have gone mostly unheeded. The present thesis aimed to extend the hitherto findings of stress and aggression in this regard. For this purpose two psychophysiological studies with healthy adults were carried out, both using the socially evaluated-cold pressor test as an acute stress induction. Additionally to behavioral data and subjective reports, event related potentials were measured and acute levels of salivary cortisol were collected on the basis of which stressed participants were divided into cortisol-responders and "nonresponders. Study 1 examined the impact of acute stress-induced cortisol increase on inhibitory control and its neural correlates. 41 male participants were randomly assigned to the stress procedure or to a non-stressful control condition. Beforehand and afterwards, participants performed a Go Nogo task with visual letters to measure response inhibition. The effect of acute stress-induced cortisol increase on covert and overt aggressive behavior and on the processing of provoking stimuli within the aggressive encounter was investigated in study 2. Moreover, this experiment examined the combined impact of stress and aggression on ensuing affective information processing. 71 male and female participants were either exposed to the stress or to the control condition. Following this, half of each group received high or low levels of provocation during the Taylor Aggression Paradigm. At the end of the experiment, a passive viewing paradigm with affective pictures depicting positive, negative, or aggressive scenes with either humans or objects was realized. The results revealed that men were not affected by a stress-induced rise in cortisol on a behavioral level, showing neither impaired response inhibition nor enhanced aggressive behavior. In contrast, women showed enhanced overt and covert aggressive behavior under a surge of endogenous cortisol, confirming previous results, albeit only in case of high provocation and only up to the level of the control group. Unlike this rather moderate impact on behavior, cortisol showed a distinct impact on neural correlates of information processing throughout inhibitory control, aggression-eliciting stimuli, and emotional pictures for both men and women. At this, stress-induced increase of cortisol resulted in enhanced N2 amplitudes to Go stimuli, whereas P2 amplitudes to both and N2 to Nogo amplitudes retained unchanged, indicating an overcorrection and caution of the response activation in favor of successful inhibitory control. The processing of aggression-eliciting stimuli during the aggressive encounter was complexly altered by stress differently for women and men. Under increased cortisol levels, the frontal or parietal P3 amplitude patterns were either diminished or reversed in the case of high provocation compared to the control group and to cortisol-nonresponders, indicating a desensitization towards aggression-eliciting stimuli in males, but a more elaborate processing of those in women. Moreover, stress-induced cortisol and provocation jointly altered subsequent affective information processing at early as well as later stages of the information processing stream. Again, increased levels of cortisol led opposite directed amplitudes in the case of high provocation relative to the control group and cortisol-nonresponders, with enhanced N2 amplitudes in men and reduced P3 and LPP amplitudes in men and women for all affective pictures, suggesting initially enhanced emotional reactivity in men, but ensuing reduced motivational attention and enhanced emotion regulation in both, men and women. As a result, these present findings confirm the relevance of HPA activity in the elicitation and persistence of human aggressive behavior. Moreover, they reveal the significance of compensatory and emotion regulatory strategies and mechanisms in response to stress and provocation, indorsing the relevance of social information and cognitive control processes. Still, more research is needed to clarify the conditions which lead to the facilitation of aggression and by which compensatory mechanisms this is prevented.
Die Dissertation beschäftigt sich mit der Frage, inwieweit und unter welchen Bedingungen psychophysiologische Maße gewinnbringend zur empirischen Prüfung physiologisch orientierter Persönlichkeitstheorien genutzt werden können. Am Beispiel des Extraversionsmodells von Brebner & Cooper (1985), das mit Hilfe ereigniskorrelierter Hirnrindenpotentiale (EKP) empirisch geprüft wurde, wird deutlich herausgearbeitet, mit welchen Herausforderungen sich eine solche Forschung konfrontiert sieht: die konsequente und streng theoriegeleitete Verknüpfung psychologischer Konzepte mit psychophysiologischen Maßen, die sorgfältige Berücksichtigung der funktionalen Bedeutung und der komplexen auslösenden Bedingungen der elektrophysiologischen Parametern im Kontext des gewählten Paradigmas sowie die umfassende Kontrolle experimenteller und situationsspezifischer Rahmenbedingung. Das Brebner-Cooper-Modell führt Verhaltensunterschiede zwischen Extravertierten und Introvertierten auf differentiell wirksame exzitatorische und inhibitorische Prozesse zurück, die im Zusammenhang mit der Analyse von Reizen (Reizanalyse) und der Vorbereitung von Reaktionen (Reaktionsorganisation) in einer spezifischen Situation stehen. Der empirische Teil der Arbeit beschreibt zwei EKP-Experimente, in denen langsame Potentiale zur Untersuchung dieser Modellkonzepte herangezogen wurden. Das Ausmaß kortikaler Aktivierung und Deaktivierung bei Introvertierten vs. Extravertierten in Abhängigkeit von variierenden Anforderungen an Reizanalyse und Reaktionsorganisation wurde über die Contingent Negative Variation (CNV) abgebildet. Aufgrund theoretischer wie empirischer Überlegungen wurde davon ausgegangen, dass sich Unterschiede in der Reizanalyse in der initial CNV (iCNV), Unterschiede in der Reaktionsorganisation dagegen in der terminal CNV (tCNV) niederschlagen. Die Ergebnisse bestätigen, dass der Einsatz psychophysiologischer Methoden zur Theorienprüfung erst dann vielversprechend ist, wenn zuvor eine Validierung der elektrophysiologischen Maße als geeignete Indikatoren für die psychologischen Konstrukte erfolgt ist.
In der vorliegenden Dissertation wurde Belohnungssensitivität mit Spielverhalten und elektrophysiologischen Korrelaten wie dem Ruhe-EEG und ereigniskorrelierten Potenzialen auf Feedback-Reize in Verbindung gebracht. Belohnungssensitivität ist nach der zugrundeliegenden Definition als Konstrukt mit mehreren Facetten zu verstehen, die eng mit Extraversion, positiver Affektivität, dem Behavioral Activation System, Novelty Seeking, Belohnungsabhängigkeit und Selbstwirksamkeit assoziiert sind. Bei der Untersuchung einer spezifischen Spielsituation, in der 48 gesunde Studentinnen durch eigene Entscheidungen Belohnungen erhalten konnten, zeigte sich, dass das Spielverhalten mit den während des Spiels erfassten ereigniskorrelierten Potentialen (hier: FRN (feedback related negativity)und P300) auf die Belohnungssignale in Form eines Feedbacks korreliert. Belohnungssensitive Personen zeigen tendenziell nach einem Gewinn-Feedback eine weniger negative FRN-Amplitude, die wiederum positiv mit der gewählten Einsatzhöhe assoziiert ist. Auch die Amplitude der P300 scheint mit dem Spielverhalten zusammenzuhängen. So zeigte sich ein positiver Zusammenhang zwischen typisch belohnungssensitivem Verhalten und der mittleren Amplitude der P300: Gewinne gehen mit einer größeren P300-Positivierung und schnelleren Entscheidungen im Spiel einher. Dagegen konnte weder das Spielverhalten noch die über diverse Fragebögen erfasste Ausprägung der Belohnungssensitivität in der kortikalen Grundaktivierung im Ruhezustand einer Person abgebildet werden. Die vorliegenden Ergebnisse deuten darauf hin, dass Belohnungssensitivität ein Persönlichkeitsmerkmal ist, das sich sowohl im Verhalten, als auch in der elektrokortikalen Aktivität in belohnungsrelevanten Situationen widerspiegelt.