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Journal Article

Citation

Kreibig SD, Wilhelm FH, Roth WT, Gross JJ. Biol. Psychol. 2011; 87(1): 161-163.

Affiliation

Stanford University.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.biopsycho.2011.02.008

PMID

21352887

Abstract

It has been suggested that high arousal negative affective states, but not low arousal negative affective states, potentiate the startle response. Because sadness has generally been studied as a low arousal emotion, it remains unclear whether high arousal sadness would produce startle potentiation to a similar degree as high arousal fear. To address this issue, 32 participants viewed two sets of 10-min film clips selected to induce two affective states of high subjective arousal (fear, sadness) and a neutral state of low subjective arousal, while the eyeblink startle response associated with brief noise bursts was assessed using orbicularis oculi EMG. Larger blink magnitude was found for fearful than for sad or neutral clips. Implications for conceptualizing sadness are discussed.


Language: en

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