Literature DB >> 22227946

Emotional distraction unbalances visual processing.

Rashmi Gupta1, Jane E Raymond.   

Abstract

Brain mechanisms used to control nonemotional aspects of cognition may be distinct from those regulating responses to emotional stimuli, with activity of the latter being detrimental to the former. Previous studies have shown that suppression of irrelevant emotional stimuli produces a largely right-lateralized pattern of frontal brain activation, thus predicting that emotional stimuli may invoke temporary, lateralized costs to performance on nonemotional cognitive tasks. To test this, we briefly (85 ms) presented a central, irrelevant, expressive (angry, happy, sad, or fearful) or neutral face 100 ms prior to a letter search task. The presentation of emotional versus neutral faces slowed subsequent search for targets appearing in the left, but not the right, hemifield, supporting the notion of a right-lateralized, emotional response mechanism that competes for control with nonemotional cognitive processes. Presentation of neutral, scrambled, or inverted neutral faces produced no such laterality effects on visual search response times.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22227946     DOI: 10.3758/s13423-011-0210-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev        ISSN: 1069-9384


  26 in total

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Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2007-06

Review 7.  Visual and oculomotor selection: links, causes and implications for spatial attention.

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Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2006-02-15       Impact factor: 20.229

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2006-02-15       Impact factor: 6.167

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Authors:  P J Whalen; G Bush; R J McNally; S Wilhelm; S C McInerney; M A Jenike; S L Rauch
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10.  The Face-to-Face Light Detection Paradigm: A New Methodology for Investigating Visuospatial Attention Across Different Face Regions in Live Face-to-Face Communication Settings.

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  10 in total

1.  Priming by motivationally salient distractors produces hemispheric asymmetries in visual processing.

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2.  Only irrelevant angry, but not happy, expressions facilitate the response inhibition.

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4.  Low attentional engagement makes attention network activity susceptible to emotional interference.

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5.  Investigating the Neural Correlates of Emotion-Cognition Interaction Using an Affective Stroop Task.

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6.  Isolating the Effects of Word's Emotional Valence on Subsequent Morphosyntactic Processing: An Event-Related Brain Potentials Study.

Authors:  Javier Espuny; Laura Jiménez-Ortega; David Hernández-Gutiérrez; Francisco Muñoz; Sabela Fondevila; Pilar Casado; Manuel Martín-Loeches
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7.  Age and Gender Differences in Emotion Recognition.

Authors:  Laura Abbruzzese; Nadia Magnani; Ian H Robertson; Mauro Mancuso
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8.  Irrelevant positive emotional information facilitates response inhibition only under a high perceptual load.

Authors:  Shubham Pandey; Rashmi Gupta
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-08-26       Impact factor: 4.996

9.  Irrelevant angry faces impair response inhibition, and the go and stop processes share attentional resources.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-10-10       Impact factor: 4.996

10.  Automatic Change Detection of Emotional and Neutral Body Expressions: Evidence From Visual Mismatch Negativity.

Authors:  Xiaobin Ding; Jianyi Liu; Tiejun Kang; Rui Wang; Mariska E Kret
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2019-08-23
  10 in total

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