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Journal Article

Citation

Bendall RCA, Mohamed A, Thompson C. Cogn. Process. 2019; 20(3): 309-316.

Affiliation

Directorate of Psychology and Public Health, School of Health Sciences, University of Salford, Salford, M5 4WT, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Springer Verlag)

DOI

10.1007/s10339-018-0898-x

PMID

30582137

Abstract

Research shows that emotional stimuli can capture attention, and this can benefit or impair performance, depending on the characteristics of a task. Additionally, whilst some findings show that attention expands under positive conditions, others show that emotion has no influence on the broadening of attention. The current study investigated whether emotional real-world scenes influence attention in a visual search task. Participants were asked to identify a target letter embedded in the centre or periphery of emotional images. Identification accuracy was lower in positive images compared to neutral images, and response times were slower in negative images. This suggests that real-world emotional stimuli have a distracting effect on visual attention and search. There was no evidence that emotional images influenced the spatial spread of attention. Instead, it is suggested that findings may provide support for the argument that positive emotion encourages a global processing style and negative emotion promotes local processing.


Language: en

Keywords

Bayesian analysis; Cognition; Emotion; Real-world scenes; Visual attention; Visual search

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