Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yuejia Luo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yuejia Luo.


Neuroscience Letters | 2006

Temporal course of emotional negativity bias: An ERP study

Yu-Xia Huang; Yuejia Luo

There is considerable evidence that people are especially sensitive to emotionally negative materials. However, the temporal course of the negativity bias is still unclear. To address this issue, we observed the changes of P2, late positive components (LPC) and lateralized readiness potential (LRP) under positive, negative and neutral conditions, with International Affective Picture System (IAPS) pictures as emotional stimuli. We found that the amplitude of P2 in the negative block was significantly larger than that in the positive block, indicating that the attentional negativity bias occured very early in emotion perception. The LPC amplitude evoked by negative pictures was larger than that by positive and neutral pictures, suggesting that the negativity bias also occurred in a later evaluation stage of emotion processing. The response-locked LRP interval was shortest in the block of negative pictures, indicating that the negative contents elicited a reaction priming effect. Above all, this research showed that emotional negativity bias could occur in several temporal stages distinguished by attention, evaluation and reaction readiness periods.


Human Brain Mapping | 2004

Aha! Effects in a Guessing Riddle Task: An Event-Related Potential Study

Xiaoqin Mai; Jing Luo; Jianhui Wu; Yuejia Luo

Insight problem solving has been the topic of much investigation. It is believed widely that insight critically contains the process of breaking ones mental set. Recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) research on puzzle solving showed that insight was associated with activities in anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and other areas (Luo and Niki [ 2003 ]: Hippocampus 13:274–281). We proposed ACC might mediate processes of breaking ones mental set, given its well‐known role in cognitive conflict. In the present research, high‐density event‐related potentials (ERPs) were recorded to examine the electrophysiologic correlates of insight problem solving. One hundred twenty interesting Chinese riddles (half difficult and half easy) were adopted as materials. For each trial, subjects were either given an easy puzzle followed by a keyword that was consistent with the subjects initial thinking (“No‐aha answer”), or a difficult puzzle followed by a keyword that was consistent with an unusual interpretation, so that it broke the subjects initial mental set (“Aha answer”). Results from 14 subjects showed that Aha answers elicited a more negative ERP deflection than did No‐aha answers in the time window from 250–500 msec after onset of the answer. The ERP difference wave (Aha minus No‐aha answer) showed the maximum amplitude over the central site (Cz) with a peak latency of 380 msec (N380). Voltage and current density maps of the difference wave showed strong activity and current density in the frontocentral region. Dipole analysis localized the generator of the N380 in the ACC. N380 therefore probably reflects an “Aha!” effect, and the ACC generator may be involved in the breaking of mental set. Hum. Brain Mapp. 22:261–270, 2004.


Brain Research | 2006

Semantic and syntactic processing in Chinese sentence comprehension: evidence from event-related potentials.

Zheng Ye; Yuejia Luo; Angela D. Friederici; Xiaolin Zhou

An ERP experiment was conducted to explore semantic and syntactic processes as well as their interplay in Chinese sentence comprehension. Participants were auditorily presented with Chinese ba sentences, which were either correct, semantically incorrect, syntactically incorrect, or both semantically and syntactically incorrect. The syntactic violation, which was created by eliminating the object-noun phrase from a preposition-object phrase structure, elicited an early starting anterior negativity which merged into a sustained negativity over anterior sites and a temporally limited centro-parietal negativity. The semantic violation elicited an early starting N400 effect. The combined violation in which the syntactic phrase structure violation and the semantic violation were crossed elicited an early staring sustained anterior negativity similar to the pure syntactic effect, and a centro-parietal negativity which was more negative than those of the syntactic condition and the semantic condition. No P600 was obtained neither for the syntactic nor for the combined condition. The results suggest that the syntactic processes (at about 50 ms) appear earlier than the semantic processes (at around 150 ms). They are independent from each other in the early time window (150-250 ms) but interact in a later processing phase (250-400 ms) during Chinese ba sentence comprehension. The broadly distributed negativity, which occurred during the N400 latency range observed in the three violation conditions, is thought to reflect thematic integration processes in the sentence-final position.


Human Brain Mapping | 2015

Neural signatures of fairness-related normative decision making in the ultimatum game: A coordinate-based meta-analysis

Chunliang Feng; Yuejia Luo; Frank Krueger

The willingness to incur personal costs to enforce prosocial norms represents a hallmark of human civilization. Although recent neuroscience studies have used the ultimatum game to understand the neuropsychological mechanisms that underlie the enforcement of fairness norms; however, a precise characterization of the neural systems underlying fairness‐related norm enforcement remains elusive. In this study, we used a coordinate‐based meta‐analysis on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies using the ultimatum game with the goal to provide an additional level of evidence for the refinement of the underlying neural architecture of this human puzzling behavior. Our results demonstrated a convergence of reported activation foci in brain networks associated with psychological components of fairness‐related normative decision making, presumably reflecting a reflexive and intuitive system (System 1) and a reflective and deliberate system (System 2). System 1 (anterior insula, ventromedial prefrontal cortex [PFC]) may be associated with the reflexive and intuitive responses to norm violations, representing a motivation to punish norm violators. Those intuitive responses conflict with economic self‐interest, encoded in the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), which may engage cognitive control from a reflective and deliberate System 2 to resolve the conflict by either suppressing (ventrolateral PFC, dorsomedial PFC, left dorsolateral PFC, and rostral ACC) the intuitive responses or over‐riding self‐interest (right dorsolateral PFC). Taken together, we suggest that fairness‐related norm enforcement recruits an intuitive system for rapid evaluation of norm violations and a deliberate system for integrating both social norms and self‐interest to regulate the intuitive system in favor of more flexible decision making. Hum Brain Mapp 36:591–602, 2015.


Psychophysiology | 2010

Anxiety and feedback negativity

Ruolei Gu; Yu-Xia Huang; Yuejia Luo

It has been suggested that anxious individuals are more prone to feel that negative outcomes are particularly extreme and to interpret ambiguous outcomes as negative compared to nonanxious individuals. Previous studies have demonstrated that the feedback negativity (FN) component of event-related brain potential (ERP) is sensitive to outcome evaluation and outcome expectancy. Hence, we predicted that the FN should be different between high trait-anxiety (HTA) and low trait-anxiety (LTA) individuals. To test our hypothesis, the ERPs were recorded during a simple monetary gambling task. The FN was measured as a difference wave created across conditions. We found that the amplitude of the FN indicating negative versus positive outcomes was significantly larger for LTA individuals compared to HTA individuals. However, there was no significant difference in the FN between groups in response to ambiguous versus positive outcomes. The results indicate that there is a relationship between the FN and individual differences in anxiety. We suggest that these results reflect the impact of anxiety on outcome expectation. Our results challenge the reinforcement learning theory of error-related negativity, which proposes that ERN and FN reflect the same cognitive process.


Brain Research | 2006

Brain mechanism of Stroop interference effect in Chinese characters

Jiang Qiu; Yuejia Luo; Quanhong Wang; Fenghua Zhang; Qinglin Zhang

Event-related brain potentials were measured when 11 healthy Chinese subjects finished Chinese Characters Stroop tasks. The behavioral data showed that the Stroop task yielded a robust Stroop interference effect as indexed by longer RT for incongruent than congruent color words. Scalp ERP analysis revealed the neurophysiological substrate of the interference effect: a greater negativity in the incongruent as compared to the congruent was found between 350 and 550 ms poststimulus over midline fronto-central scalp regions. Dipole source analysis (BESA software) of the difference wave (incongruent-congruent) indicated that a generator localized in prefrontal cortex (PFC) contributed to this effect, possibly related to conflict processing and response selection. The results provided electrophysiologic evidences of the brain and cognitive mechanism of Stroop interference effect in Chinese characters and suggested that the difference between Chinese characters and English words had influence on temporal patterns of the Stroop interference effect.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Spontaneous Brain Activity Relates to Autonomic Arousal

Jin Fan; Pengfei Xu; Nicholas T. Van Dam; Tehila Eilam-Stock; Xiaosi Gu; Yuejia Luo; Patrick R. Hof

Although possible sources and functions of the resting-state networks (RSNs) of the brain have been proposed, most evidence relies on circular logic and reverse inference. We propose that autonomic arousal provides an objective index of psychophysiological states during rest that may also function as a driving source of the activity and connectivity of RSNs. Recording blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal using functional magnetic resonance imaging and skin conductance simultaneously during rest in human subjects, we found that the spontaneous fluctuations of BOLD signals in key nodes of RSNs are associated with changes in nonspecific skin conductance response, a sensitive psychophysiological index of autonomic arousal. Our findings provide evidence of an important role for the autonomic nervous system to the spontaneous activity of the brain during “rest.”


Neuroreport | 2007

Detecting perceptual conflict by the feedback-related negativity in brain potentials.

Shiwei Jia; Hong Li; Yuejia Luo; Antao Chen; Baoxi Wang; Xiaolin Zhou

The feedback-related negativity (FRN) in brain potentials is typically observed for the outcome evaluation concerning ones performance or monetary reward. Using a task in which the participant guesses whether the first stimulus (S1) would have the same color as the subsequently presented second stimulus (S2), this study demonstrates that the FRN to S2, which serves as feedback to the guessing, is also sensitive to the conflict between perceptual representations of S1 and S2 in working memory. The FRN effect for the feedback concerning the correctness of ones performance is modulated by the congruency between perceptual properties of the stimuli. The anterior cingulate cortex, which generates the FRN, is thus a general conflict-monitoring device detecting both response and perceptual conflicts.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Neural Basis of Emotional Decision Making in Trait Anxiety

Pengfei Xu; Ruolei Gu; Lucas S. Broster; Runguo Wu; Nicholas T. Van Dam; Yang Jiang; Jin Fan; Yuejia Luo

Although trait anxiety has been associated with risk decision making, whether it is related to risk per se or to the feeling of the risk, as well as the underlying neurocognitive mechanisms, remains unclear. Using a decision-making task with a manipulation of frame (i.e., written description of options as a potential gain or loss) and functional magnetic resonance imaging, we investigated the neurocognitive relationship between trait anxiety and decision making. The classic framing effect was observed: participants chose the safe option when it was described as a potential gain, but they avoided the same option when it was described as a potential loss. Most importantly, trait anxiety was positively correlated with this behavioral bias. Trait anxiety was also positively correlated with amygdala-based “emotional” system activation and its coupling with the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) when decisions were consistent with the framing effect, but negatively correlated with the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC)-based “analytic” system activation and its connectivity to the vmPFC when decisions ran counter to the framing effect. Our findings suggest that trait anxiety is not associated with subjective risk preference but an evaluative bias of emotional information in decision making, underpinned by a hyperactive emotional system and a hypoactive analytic system in the brain.


Neuroscience Letters | 2010

Emotional conflict occurs at an early stage: evidence from the emotional face-word Stroop task.

Xiang-ru Zhu; Hui-jun Zhang; Ting-ting Wu; Wenbo Luo; Yuejia Luo

The perceptual processing of emotional conflict was studied using electrophysiological techniques to measure event-related potentials (ERPs). The emotional face-word Stroop task in which emotion words are written in prominent red color across a face was use to study emotional conflict. In each trial, the emotion word and facial expression were either congruent or incongruent (in conflict). When subjects were asked to identify the expression of the face during a trial, the incongruent condition evoked a more negative N170 ERP component in posterior lateral sites than in the congruent condition. In contrast, when subjects were asked to identify the word during a trial, the incongruent condition evoked a less negative N170 component than the congruent condition. The present findings extend our understanding of the control processes involved in emotional conflict by demonstrating that differentiation of emotional congruency begins at an early perceptual processing stage.

Collaboration


Dive into the Yuejia Luo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ruolei Gu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chunliang Feng

Beijing Normal University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiaoqin Mai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hong Li

Southwest University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lili Wang

Beijing Normal University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Chao Liu

McGovern Institute for Brain Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge