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Dive into the research topics where Fátima Erthal is active.

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Featured researches published by Fátima Erthal.


Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience | 2005

Load-dependent modulation of affective picture processing

Fátima Erthal; Leticia Oliveira; Izabela Mocaiber; Mirtes G. Pereira; Walter Machado-Pinheiro; Eliane Volchan; Luiz Pessoa

Because of the biological significance of emotional stimuli, their processing is considered largely automatic. In the study reported herein, we tested the alternative hypothesis—namely, that the processing of emotional stimuli requires some level of attention. Our experiments utilized highly negative and arousing visual stimuli comprising mutilated bodies. All experiments employed a single task, which consisted of determining whether two peripheral bars were like oriented or not, thereby eliminating potential task-difference confounds that may have contaminated prior studies. Our results revealed that task-irrelevant unpleasant images slowed reaction time during the performance of the main task. Such interference was modulated by task difficulty as well as by alcohol consumption, showing that the processing of emotional visual stimuli is not immune to attentional manipulations. These results suggest that it is essential to utilize attentional manipulations that more fully consume attentional resources in order to demonstrate that the processing of emotional stimuli is resource limited.


Neuroscience | 2011

Antecedent descriptions change brain reactivity to emotional stimuli: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study of an extrinsic and incidental reappraisal strategy.

Izabela Mocaiber; Tiago Arruda Sanchez; Mirtes G. Pereira; Fátima Erthal; Mateus Joffily; Draulio B. de Araujo; Eliane Volchan; L. de Oliveira

In the present study we investigated whether individuals would take advantage of an extrinsic and incidental reappraisal strategy by giving them precedent descriptions to attenuate the emotional impact of unpleasant pictures. In fact, precedent descriptions have successfully promoted down-regulation of electrocortical activity and physiological responses to unpleasant pictures. However, the neuronal substrate underlying this effect remains unclear. Particularly, we investigated whether amygdala and insula responses, brain regions consistently implicated in emotional processing, would be modulated by this strategy. To achieve this, highly unpleasant pictures were shown in two contexts in which a prior description presented them as taken from movie scenes (fictitious) or real scenes. Results showed that the fictitious condition was characterized by down-regulation of amygdala and insula responses. Thus, the present study provides new evidence on reappraisal strategies to down-regulate emotional reactions and suggest that amygdala and insula responses to emotional stimuli are adaptive and highly flexible.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013

How you perceive threat determines your behavior

Orlando Fernandes; Liana Portugal; Rita de Cássia S. Alves; Rafaela R. Campagnoli; Izabela Mocaiber; Isabel A. David; Fátima Erthal; Eliane Volchan; Leticia Oliveira; Mirtes G. Pereira

The prioritization of processing emotional stimuli usually produces deleterious effects on task performance when it distracts from a task. One common explanation is that brain resources are consumed by emotional stimuli, diverting resources away from executing the task. Viewing unpleasant stimuli also generates defensive reactions, and these responses may be at least partially responsible for the effect of the emotional modulation observed in various reaction time (RT) paradigms. We investigated whether modulatory effects on RT vary if we presented threat stimuli to prompt different defensive responses. To trigger different responses, we manipulated threat perception by moving the direction of threatening stimuli. Threatening or neutral stimuli were presented as distractors during a bar orientation discrimination task. The results demonstrated that threat stimuli directed toward the observer produced a decrease in RT; in contrast, threat stimuli directed away from the observer produced an increase in RT, when compared to neutral stimuli. Accelerated RT during directed toward threat stimuli was attributed to increased motor preparation resulting from strong activation of the defense response cascade. In contrast, directed away threat stimuli likely activated the defense cascade, but less intensively, prompting immobility. Different threat stimuli produced varying effects, which was interpreted as evidence that the modulation of RT by emotional stimuli represents the summation of attentional and motivational effects. Additionally, participants who had been previously exposed to diverse types of violent crime were more strongly influenced by threat stimuli directed toward the observer. In sum, our data support the concept that emotions are indeed action tendencies.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2013

Emotion and attention interaction: a trade-off between stimuli relevance, motivation and individual differences.

Leticia Oliveira; Izabela Mocaiber; Isabel A. David; Fátima Erthal; Eliane Volchan; Mirtes G. Pereira

Mounting evidence suggests that the neural processing of emotional stimuli is prioritized. However, whether the processing of emotional stimuli is dependent on attention remains debatable. Several studies have investigated this issue by testing the capacity of emotional distracters to divert processing resources from an attentional main task. The attentional load theory postulates that the perceptual load of the main task determines the selective processing of the distracter. Although we agree with this theory, we also suggest that other factors could be important in determining the association between the load of the main task and distracter processing, namely, (1) the relevance of the to-be ignored stimuli and (2) the engagement in the main task due to motivation. We postulate that these factors function as opposite forces to influence distracter processing. In addition, we propose that this trade-off is modulated by individual differences. In summary, we suggest that the relationship between emotion and attention is flexible rather than rigid and depends on several factors. Considering this perspective may help us to understand the divergence in the results described by several studies in this field.


Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine | 2013

The Improvement of Emotion and Attention Regulation after a 6-Week Training of Focused Meditation: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Carolina Baptista Menezes; Maria Clara Pinheiro de Paula Couto; Luciano G. Buratto; Fátima Erthal; Mirtes G. Pereira; Lisiane Bizarro

Self-regulatory trainings can be an effective complementary treatment for mental health disorders. We investigated the effects of a six-week-focused meditation training on emotion and attention regulation in undergraduates randomly allocated to a meditation, a relaxation, or a wait-list control group. Assessment comprised a discrimination task that investigates the relationship between attentional load and emotional processing and self-report measures. For emotion regulation, results showed greater reduction in emotional interference in the low attentional load condition in meditators, particularly compared to relaxation. Only meditators presented a significant association between amount of weekly practice and the reduction in emotion interference in the task and significantly reduced image ratings of negative valence and arousal, perceived anxiety and difficulty during the task, and state and trait-anxiety. For attention regulation, response bias during the task was analyzed through signal detection theory. After training, meditation and relaxation significantly reduced bias in the high attentional load condition. Importantly, there was a dose-response effect on general bias: the lowest in meditation, increasing linearly across relaxation and wait-list. Only meditators reduced omissions in a concentrated attention test. Focused meditation seems to be an effective training for emotion and attention regulation and an alternative for treatments in the mental health context.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2017

Immobility reactions under threat: A contribution to human defensive cascade and PTSD

Eliane Volchan; Vanessa Rocha-Rego; A.F. Bastos; Jose M. Oliveira; C. Franklin; Sonia Gleiser; William Berger; Gabriela Guerra Leal de Souza; Leticia Oliveira; Isabel A. David; Fátima Erthal; Mirtes G. Pereira; Ivan Figueira

HIGHLIGHTSStabilometry is a successful methodology to study the defensive cascade in humans.Human defensive reactions: attentive immobility, immobility under attack and tonic immobility parallel those proposed for other mammals.Symptom severity in PTSD is associated with peritraumatic tonic immobility, an involuntary reaction under extreme threat.Biological indicators of tonic immobility in humans are characterized by reduced body sway, tachycardia and low heart rate variability. ABSTRACT Violence exacts a burden on public health. Gun violence is a major trigger for motor defensive reactions in humans and post‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is its main psychiatric sequela. However, studies of the human defensive cascade, especially the motor reactions, are at an early stage. This review focuses on studies that employ stabilometry, a methodology that assesses whole body motor reactions, to address defensive behaviors to violence‐related threats. Special attention is given to three reactions: “attentive immobility”, “immobility under attack” and “tonic immobility”, with emphasis on the latter – a peritraumatic reaction which has been strongly associated with the severity of PTSD. These reactions are characterized by reduced body sway and bradycardia, except tonic immobility that presents robust tachycardia. The advances made by investigations into the immobility reactions of the human defensive cascade contribute to helping to bridge the gap between human and non‐human species. Furthermore, progresses in basic research to objectively monitor motor defensive reactions under threat can help to develop a dimensional, trans‐diagnostic approach to PTSD.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2015

Amygdala responses to unpleasant pictures are influenced by task demands and positive affect trait

Tiago Arruda Sanchez; Izabela Mocaiber; Fátima Erthal; Mateus Joffily; Eliane Volchan; Mirtes G. Pereira; Draulio B. de Araujo; Leticia Oliveira

The role of attention in emotional processing is still the subject of debate. Recent studies have found that high positive affect in approach motivation narrows attention. Furthermore, the positive affect trait has been suggested as an important component for determining human variability in threat reactivity. We employed functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate whether different states of attention control would modulate amygdala responses to highly unpleasant pictures relative to neutral and whether this modulation would be influenced by the positive affect trait. Participants (n = 22, 12 male) were scanned while viewing neutral (people) or unpleasant pictures (mutilated bodies) flanked by two peripheral bars. They were instructed to (a) judge the picture content as unpleasant or neutral or (b) to judge the difference in orientation between the bars in an easy condition (0 or 90(∘) orientation difference) or (c) in a hard condition (0 or 6(∘) orientation difference). Whole brain analysis revealed a task main effect of brain areas related to the experimental manipulation of attentional control, including the amygdala, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and posterior parietal cortex. Region of interest analysis showed an inverse correlation (r = -0.51, p < 0.01) between left amygdala activation and positive affect level when participants viewed unpleasant stimuli and judged bar orientation in the easy condition. This result suggests that subjects with high positive affect exhibit lower amygdala reactivity to distracting unpleasant pictures. In conclusion, the current study suggests that positive affect modulates attention effect on unpleasant pictures, therefore attenuating emotional responses.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2016

Stop or move: Defensive strategies in humans

Aline F. Bastos; André Vieira; Jose M. Oliveira; Leticia Oliveira; Mirtes G. Pereira; Ivan Figueira; Fátima Erthal; Eliane Volchan

Threatening cues and surrounding contexts trigger specific defensive response patterns. Potential threat evokes attentive immobility; attack evokes flight when escape is available and immobility when escape is blocked. Tonic immobility installs when threat is overwhelming and life-risky. In humans, reduced body sway characterizes attentive and tonic immobility, the former with bradycardia, and the later with expressive tachycardia. Here, we investigate human defensive strategies in the presence or absence of an escape route. We employed pictures depicting a man carrying a gun and worked with participants exposed to urban violence. In pictures simulating more possibility of escape, the gun was directed away from the observer; in those simulating higher risk and less chance of escape, the gun was directed toward the observer. Matched control pictures depicted similar layouts, but a non-lethal object substituted the gun. Posturographic and electrocardiographic recordings were collected. Amplitude of sway and heart rate were higher for gun directed-away and lower for gun direct-toward. Compared to their respective matched controls, there was a general increase in the amplitude of sway for the gun directed-away pictures; and a reduction in back-and-forth sway and in heart rate for gun directed-toward pictures. Taken together, those measures suggest that, when exposed to threat invading their margin of safety in a context indicating possible escape route, humans, as non-human species, engage in active escape, resembling the flight stage of the defensive cascade. When facing threat indicating less possibility of escape, humans present an immobile response with bradycardia.


Paidèia : Graduate Program in Psychology | 2004

Captura da atenção por estímulos emocionais

Fátima Erthal; Eliane Volchan; Leticia Oliveira; Walter Machado-Pinheiro; Luiz Pessoa

In the present study, we investigated whether emotional pictures, presented as distractors, interfere in the performance of a competing neutral task. The participants had to discriminate the orientation of two bars presented bilaterally in the periphery (similar or dissimilar). Task difficulty was determined by the differences in orientation between the bars: the smallest orientation differences were used in the hardest task. Simultaneously, either neutral (people) or unpleasant (mutilated) pictures were presented centrally between the two bars. We observed that negative pictures interfere in the performance even in the harder task - the more attention demanding one. When the recognition of those pictures was tested, an advantage for the negative pictures was observed. These results showed that emotional stimuli are still processed even when the attentional load of a concurrent task is high. It is possible that those stimuli are potent drivers of privileged processing and can not be easily ignored.


Archive | 2010

Regulação emocional pela atenção: novas evidência em neuroimagem

Tiago Arruda Sanchez; Izabela Mocaiber; Fátima Erthal; Mateus Joffily; Eliane Volchan; Draulio B. de Araujo; Mirtes Garcia Pereira Fortes; Leticia Oliveira

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Eliane Volchan

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Leticia Oliveira

Federal Fluminense University

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Mirtes G. Pereira

Federal Fluminense University

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Izabela Mocaiber

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Draulio B. de Araujo

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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Isabel A. David

Federal Fluminense University

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Mateus Joffily

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Tiago Arruda Sanchez

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Ivan Figueira

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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