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Journal Article

Citation

Nasrallah M, Carmel D, Lavie N. Emotion 2009; 9(5): 609-618.

Affiliation

Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, University College London, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/a0016305

PMID

19803583

PMCID

PMC2759814

Abstract

Enhanced sensitivity to information of negative (compared to positive) valence has an adaptive value, for example, by expediting the correct choice of avoidance behavior. However, previous evidence for such enhanced sensitivity has been inconclusive. Here we report a clear advantage for negative over positive words in categorizing them as emotional. In 3 experiments, participants classified briefly presented (33 ms or 22 ms) masked words as emotional or neutral. Categorization accuracy and valence-detection sensitivity were both higher for negative than for positive words. The results were not due to differences between emotion categories in either lexical frequency, extremeness of valence ratings, or arousal. These results conclusively establish enhanced sensitivity for negative over positive words, supporting the hypothesis that negative stimuli enjoy preferential access to perceptual processing.


Language: en

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