Interaction Between the Prefrontal and Visual Cortices Supports Subjective Fear

Poster Presentation 56.307: Tuesday, May 21, 2024, 2:45 – 6:45 pm, Banyan Breezeway
Session: Face and Body Perception: Emotion

Vincent Taschereau-Dumouchel1,2 (), Marjorie Côté1,2, Shawn Manuel1,2, Valevicius Darius1,2, Hakwan Lau3; 1Department of Psychiatry and Addictology, Université de Montréal, 2Centre de Recherche de l’Institut Universitaire en Santé Mentale de Montréal, 3RIKEN Center for Brain Science

It has been reported that threatening and non-threatening visual stimuli can be distinguished based on multi-voxel patterns of hemodynamic activity in the human ventral visual stream. Do these findings mean that there may be evolutionarily hardwired mechanisms within early perception, for the fast and automatic detection of threat, and maybe even for the generation of the subjective experience of fear? In this study, we provide evidence using human neuroimaging that the ventral visual stream may represent affectively neutral visual features that are statistically associated with fear ratings of participants, without representing the subjective experience of fear itself. More specifically, we show that patterns of hemodynamic activity predictive of a specific “fear profile” (i.e., fear ratings reported by a given participant) can be observed in the ventral visual stream whether a participant reports being afraid of the stimuli or not. Further, we found that the multivariate information transmission between ventral visual areas and prefrontal regions distinguished participants who reported being subjectively afraid of the stimuli from those who did not. Together, these findings support the view that the subjective experience of fear may depend on the relevant visual information triggering implicit metacognitive mechanisms in the prefrontal cortex.