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Original Articles

Orbito-frontal lesions cause impairment during late but not early emotional prosodic processing

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Pages 59-75 | Received 03 Feb 2009, Accepted 16 Jun 2009, Published online: 03 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) is functionally linked to a variety of cognitive and emotional functions. In particular, lesions of the human OFC lead to large-scale changes in social and emotional behavior. For example, patients with OFC lesions are reported to suffer from deficits in affective decision-making, including impaired emotional face and voice expression recognition (e.g., Hornak et al., 1996, 2003). However, previous studies have failed to acknowledge that emotional processing is a multistage process. Thus, different stages of emotional processing (e.g., early vs. late) in the same patient group could be affected in a qualitatively different manner. The present study investigated this possibility and tested implicit emotional speech processing in an ERP experiment followed by an explicit behavioral emotional recognition task. OFC patients listened to vocal emotional expressions of anger, fear, disgust, and happiness compared to a neutral baseline spoken either with or without lexical content. In line with previous evidence (Paulmann & Kotz, 2008b), both patients and healthy controls differentiate emotional and neutral prosody within 200 ms (P200). However, the recognition of emotional vocal expressions is impaired in OFC patients as compared to healthy controls. The current data serve as first evidence that emotional prosody processing is impaired only at a late, and not at an early processing stage in OFC patients.

Acknowledgements

Funding was supplied by the German Research Foundation (DFG FOR-499 to SAK). The authors would like to thank Kerstin Flake and Matthieu Couturier for help with graphical presentation, Conny Schmidt for help with data acquisition, and Kathrin Rothermich for help with data processing. The support of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) to SP is gratefully acknowledged.

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