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Review
. 2023 Oct:183:108669.
doi: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2023.108669. Epub 2023 Aug 28.

Imagery, emotion, and bioinformational theory: From body to brain

Affiliations
Review

Imagery, emotion, and bioinformational theory: From body to brain

Margaret M Bradley et al. Biol Psychol. 2023 Oct.

Abstract

The bioinformational theory of emotional imagery is a model of the hypothetical mental representations activated when people imagine emotionally engaging events, and was initially proposed to guide research and practice in the use of imaginal exposure as a treatment for fear and anxiety (Lang, 1979). In this 50 year overview, we discuss the development of bioinformational theory and its impact on the study of psychophysiology and psychopathology, most importantly assessing its viability and predictions in light of more recent brain-based studies of neural functional activation. Bioinformational theory proposes that narrative imagery, typically cued by language scripts, activates an associative memory network in the brain that includes stimulus (e.g., agents, contexts), semantic (e.g., facts and beliefs) and, most critically for emotion, response information (e.g., autonomic and somatic) that represents relevant real-world coping actions and reactions. Psychophysiological studies in healthy and clinical samples reliably find measurable response output during aversive and appetitive narrative imagery. Neuroimaging studies confirm that emotional imagery is associated with significant activation in motor regions of the brain, as well as in regions implicated in episodic and semantic memory retrieval, supporting the bioinformational view that narrative imagery prompts mental simulation of events that critically includes the actions and reactions engaged in emotional contexts.

Keywords: Action Imagery; Bioinformational theory; Desensitization; Embodied; Emotion; Episodic memory; Fear; Imagery; Imaginal exposure; Mental model; Mental simulation; Neuroimaging; Procedural memory; Psychopathology; Psychophysiology; Semantic memory; Sensory imagery.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

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