Literature DB >> 15456399

Emotional stroop performance for masked angry faces: it's BAS, not BIS.

Peter Putman1, Erno Hermans, Jack van Honk.   

Abstract

Theoretical models concerning selective attention to emotional stimuli predict heightened vigilance to angry faces in people with heightened trait anxiety or greater activity of the Behavioral Inhibition System (BIS). Recent evidence from electroencephalographic lateralization and affect studies and from studies assessing attentional biases to angry faces suggest, however, that heightened anger and activity of the Behavioral Activation System (BAS) should predict vigilant responding to angry faces. Social anxiety should predict avoidance of angry faces. Results from a masked emotional Stroop task verified these hypotheses, but an unmasked emotional Stroop provided no reliable relations. This dissociation confirms earlier claims that masked emotional Stroop performance is impervious to conscious control over the cognitive-emotional processes, as measured by the Stroop task. (c) 2004 APA, all rights reserved

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15456399     DOI: 10.1037/1528-3542.4.3.305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emotion        ISSN: 1528-3542


  25 in total

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4.  Inhibitory control as a moderator of threat-related interference biases in social anxiety.

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Review 5.  Emotional memory function, personality structure and psychopathology: a neural system approach to the identification of vulnerability markers.

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8.  Do personality traits predict individual differences in excitatory and inhibitory learning?

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Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-05-08

9.  Exogenous cortisol acutely influences motivated decision making in healthy young men.

Authors:  Peter Putman; Niki Antypa; Panagiota Crysovergi; Willem A J van der Does
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10.  Influence of aggression on information processing in the emotional stroop task--an event-related potential study.

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