The visual brain quickly sorted stimuli for emotional
impact despite high-speed presentation (3 or 5 per s) in
a sustained, serial torrent of 700 complex pictures. Event-related
potentials, recorded with a dense electrode array, showed
selective discrimination of emotionally arousing stimuli
from less affective content. Primary sources of this activation
were over the occipital cortices, extending to right parietal
cortex, suggesting a processing focus in the posterior
visual system. Emotion discrimination was independent of
formal pictorial properties (color, brightness, spatial
frequency, and complexity). The data support the hypothesis
of a very short-term conceptual memory store (M. C. Potter,
1999)—shown here to include a fleeting but reliable
assessment of affective meaning.