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Dive into the research topics where Andreas Löw is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas Löw.


Brain Research | 2008

Affective picture perception: Emotion, context, and the late positive potential

M. Carmen Pastor; Margaret M. Bradley; Andreas Löw; Francesco Versace; Javier Moltó; Peter J. Lang

Event-related potentials (ERP) were measured when pleasant, neutral or unpleasant pictures were presented in the context of similarly valenced stimuli, and compared to ERPs elicited when the same pictures were viewed in an intermixed context. An early ERP component (150-300 ms) measured over occipital and fronto-central sensors was specific to viewing pleasant pictures and was not affected by presentation context. Replicating previous studies, emotional pictures prompted a larger late positive potential (LPP, 400-700 ms) and a larger positive slow wave (1-6 s) over centro-parietal sensors that also did not differ by presentation context. On the other hand, ERPs elicited when viewing neutral pictures varied as a function of context, eliciting somewhat larger LPPs when presented in blocks, and prompting smaller slow waves over occipital sensors. Taken together, the data indicate that emotional pictures prompt increased attention and orienting that is unaffected by its context of presentation, whereas neutral pictures are more vulnerable to context manipulations.


Psychological Science | 2008

Both Predator and Prey Emotional Arousal in Threat and Reward

Andreas Löw; Peter J. Lang; J. Carson Smith; Margaret M. Bradley

This research examined the psychophysiology of emotional arousal anticipatory to potentially aversive and highly pleasant outcomes. Human brain reactions (event-related potentials) and body reactions (heart rate, skin conductance, the probe startle reflex) were assessed along motivational gradients determined by apparent distance from sites of potential punishment or reward. A predator-prey survival context was simulated using cues that signaled possible money rewards or possible losses; the cues appeared to loom progressively closer to the viewer, until a final step when a rapid key response could ensure reward or avoid a punishing loss. The observed anticipatory response patterns of heightened vigilance and physiological mobilization are consistent with the view that the physiology of emotion is founded on action dispositions that evolved in mammals to facilitate survival by dealing with threats or capturing life-sustaining rewards.


Psychophysiology | 2009

Enhanced long‐term recollection for emotional pictures: Evidence from high‐density ERPs

Mathias Weymar; Andreas Löw; Christiane A. Melzig; Alfons O. Hamm

The present study used behavioral and electrophysiological measures to investigate the processes mediating long-term recognition memory for emotional and neutral pictures. The results show enhanced memory recollection for emotional arousing pictures compared to neutral low arousing pictures. In accordance with the behavioral data, we observed enhanced old/new effects in the ERPs for emotionally arousing pictures in the recollection-sensitive old/new component at centro-parietal sites (500-800 ms). Moreover, early old/new effects were present over frontal and parietal sites (300-500 ms) irrespective of picture contents. Analysis of the subjective awareness, indexed by the confidence ratings, showed that the late parietal old/new effect was increased for high confidence responses whereas the early component (300-500 ms) was mainly driven by low confidence responses, an indication for familiarity based recognition processes.


Psychological Science | 2015

When Threat Is Near, Get Out of Here Dynamics of Defensive Behavior During Freezing and Active Avoidance

Andreas Löw; Mathias Weymar; Alfons O. Hamm

When detecting a threat, humans and other animals engage in defensive behaviors and supporting physiological adjustments that vary with threat imminence and potential response options. In the present study, we shed light on the dynamics of defensive behaviors and associated physiological adjustments in humans using multiple psychophysiological and brain measures. When participants were exposed to a dynamically approaching, uncontrollable threat, attentive freezing was augmented, as indicated by an increase in skin conductance, fear bradycardia, and potentiation of the startle reflex. In contrast, when participants had the opportunity to actively avoid the approaching threat, attention switched to response preparation, as indicated by an inhibition of the startle magnitude and by a sharp drop of the probe-elicited P3 component of the evoked brain potentials. These new findings on the dynamics of defensive behaviors form an important intersection between animal and human research and have important implications for understanding fear and anxiety-related disorders.


Human Brain Mapping | 2011

Emotional memories are resilient to time: evidence from the parietal ERP old/new effect.

Mathias Weymar; Andreas Löw; Alfons O. Hamm

Emotional memories can be extremely robust and long‐lasting and can contribute to the development of anxiety disorders. Despite tremendous work on neural responses underlying the memory formation of emotional events, less is known about long‐term retention. In the present study, behavioral and electrophysiological measures were used to investigate long‐term recognition memory for emotional (unpleasant and pleasant) and neutral pictures after two retention intervals (1 week vs. 1 year) in 21 male subjects. The results show enhanced recognition performance for emotional relative to neutral pictures for both test delays. On the neural side, the retrieval of emotional pictures compared to neutral pictures was accompanied after 1 week by an enhanced old/new effect (500–800 ms), originating in the parietal cortex. After 1‐year retention delay, only unpleasant but not pleasant pictures were different from neutral pictures in the recollection‐sensitive ERP component. Analysis of the subjective awareness (confidence ratings) during recognition indicated that behavioral and electrocortical response patterns were exclusively driven by high confidence responses, an indication for recollection‐based recognition. These results suggest that high arousing emotional memories were highly consistent over time relative to neutral memories. Hum Brain Mapp, 2011.


NeuroImage | 2011

The face is more than its parts — Brain dynamics of enhanced spatial attention to schematic threat

Mathias Weymar; Andreas Löw; Arne Öhman; Alfons O. Hamm

A rapid response to environmental threat is crucial for survival and requires an appropriate attention allocation toward its location. Visual search paradigms have provided evidence for the enhanced capture of attention by threatening faces. In two EEG experiments, we sought to determine whether the detection of threat requires complete faces or salient features underlying the facial expression. Measuring the N2pc component as an electrophysiological indicator of attentional selection we investigated participants searching for either a complete discrepant schematic threatening or friendly face within an array of neutral faces, or single features (eyebrows and eyes vs. eyebrows) of threatening and friendly faces. Threatening faces were detected faster compared to friendly faces. In accordance, threatening angry targets showed a more pronounced occipital N2pc between 200 and 300 ms than friendly facial targets. Moreover, threatening configurations, were detected more rapidly than friendly-related features when the facial configuration contained eyebrows and eyes. No differences were observed when only a single feature (eyebrows) had to be detected. Threatening-related and friendly-related features did not show any differences in the N2pc across all configuration conditions. Taken together, the findings provide direct electrophysiological support for rapid prioritized attention to facial threat, an advantage that seems not to be driven by low level visual features.


Emotion | 2006

Rapid picture presentation and affective engagement.

J. Carson Smith; Andreas Löw; Margaret M. Bradley; Peter J. Lang

Emotional reactions were assessed to pictorial stimuli presented in a continuous stream at rapid speeds that compromise conceptual memory and the processing of specific picture content. Blocks of unpleasant, neutral, or pleasant pictures were presented at the rate of either three pictures per second or seven pictures per second. Even with rapid presentation rates, startle reflexes, corrugator muscle activity, and skin conductance responses were heightened when viewing unpleasant pictures. These effects were stronger later in the aversive block, suggesting that cumulative exposure increasingly activates the defense system. The findings suggest that, despite conceptual masking inherent in rapid serial visual presentation, affective pictures prompt measurable emotional engagement.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2012

Stress sensitizes the brain: Increased processing of unpleasant pictures after exposure to acute stress

Mathias Weymar; Lars Schwabe; Andreas Löw; Alfons O. Hamm

A key component of acute stress is a surge in vigilance that enables a prioritized processing of highly salient information to promote the organisms survival. In this study, we investigated the neural effects of acute stress on emotional picture processing. ERPs were measured during a deep encoding task, in which 40 male participants categorized 50 unpleasant and 50 neutral pictures according to arousal and valence. Before picture encoding, participants were subjected either to the Socially Evaluated Cold Pressor Test (SECPT) or to a warm water control procedure. The exposure to the SECPT resulted in increased subjective and autonomic (heart rate and blood pressure) stress responses relative to the control condition. Viewing of unpleasant relative to neutral pictures evoked enhanced late positive potentials (LPPs) over centro-parietal scalp sites around 400 msec after picture onset. Prior exposure to acute stress selectively increased the LPPs for unpleasant pictures. Moreover, the LPP magnitude for unpleasant pictures following the SECPT was positively associated with incidental free recall performance 24 hr later. The present results suggest that acute stress sensitizes the brain for increased processing of cues in the environment, particularly priming the processing of unpleasant cues. This increased processing is related to later long-term memory performance.


Psychological Science | 2003

Semantic Categorization in the Human Brain Spatiotemporal Dynamics Revealed by Magnetoencephalography

Andreas Löw; Shlomo Bentin; Brigitte Rockstroh; Yaron Silberman; Annette Gomolla; Rudolf Cohen; Thomas Elbert

We examined the cortical representation of semantic categorization using magnetic source imaging in a task that revealed both dissociations among superordinate categories and associations among different base-level concepts within these categories. Around 200 ms after stimulus onset, the spatiotemporal correlation of brain activity elicited by base-level concepts was greater within than across superordinate categories in the right temporal lobe. Unsupervised clustering of data showed similar categorization between 210 and 450 ms mainly in the left hemisphere. This pattern suggests that well-defined semantic categories are represented in spatially distinct, macroscopically separable neural networks, independent of physical stimulus properties. In contrast, a broader, task-required categorization (natural/man-made) was not evident in our data. The perceptual dynamics of the categorization process is initially evident in the extrastriate areas of the right hemisphere; this activation is followed by higher-level activity along the ventral processing stream, implicating primarily the left temporal lobe.


Brain Topography | 1999

Determining Working Memory from ERP Topography

Andreas Löw; Brigitte Rockstroh; Rudolf Cohen; Olaf Hauk; Patrick Berg; Wolfgang Maier

Event-related potentials were recorded during a delayed matching-to-sample design from 17 volunteers (5 f) using high-resolution (65 channels) EEG-recordings. In the two-stimulus paradigm, the 500-ms stimulus S1 comprised a visual pattern of two diamonds differing in size, angular rotation and location; in the delay period, Working Memory (WM) load was varied in the following way: a stimulus-free interval of 1 s was followed by a 6-s presentation either of a pattern identical to the S1 (low WM load) or of a pattern differing from S1 (high WM load). The 500-ms stimulus S2 comprised one diamond; the subjects task was to indicate by left- or right-hand (respectively) button press, whether the S2 matched the (a) left- or (b) right-positioned S1-diamond, or (c) did not match at all (NoGo). The topographical distribution of activity in the time intervals (a) following S1-offset, (b) during the WM manipulation interval and (c) prior to S2 were evaluated in the signal (scalp potential) and source (Minimum Norm) space. Following S1-offset the ERP pattern was characterised by negativity over posterior areas, slightly more so over the right hemisphere. In the subsequent 6-s interval high WM load elicited a larger negative slow ERP than low WM load, the negativity increase due to high WM load being larger over frontal than central areas. Source modelling indicated activity in anterior areas under high, and posterior activity under low WM load. Asymmetry of activity, although indicating a shift to left-hemispheric activity under high compared to low WM load, varied considerably between subjects. Results suggest that high-resolution ERP recordings allow to examine cortical activity during WM challenge.

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Alfons O. Hamm

University of Greifswald

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Janine Wirkner

University of Greifswald

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Julia Wendt

University of Greifswald

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Thomas Jacobsen

Helmut Schmidt University

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