Literature DB >> 25046243

Emotion regulation meets emotional attention: the influence of emotion suppression on emotional attention depends on the nature of the distracters.

Julia Vogt1, Jan De Houwer1.   

Abstract

Recent evidence has suggested a crucial role of people's current goals in attention to emotional information. This asks for research investigating how and what kinds of goals shape emotional attention. The present study investigated how the goal to suppress a negative emotional state influences attention to emotion-congruent events. After inducing disgust, we instructed participants to suppress all feelings of disgust during a subsequent dot probe task. Attention to disgusting images was modulated by the sort of distracter that was presented in parallel with disgusting imagery. When disgusting images were presented together with neutral images, emotion suppression was accompanied by a tendency to attend to disgusting images. However, when disgusting images were shown with positive images that allow coping with disgust (i.e., images representing cleanliness), attention tended away from disgusting images and toward images representing cleanliness. These findings show that emotion suppression influences the allocation of attention but that the successful avoidance of emotion-congruent events depends on the availability of effective distracters. PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2014 APA, all rights reserved.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25046243     DOI: 10.1037/a0037399

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


  3 in total

1.  Cognitive mechanisms of disgust in the development and maintenance of psychopathology: A qualitative review and synthesis.

Authors:  Kelly A Knowles; Rebecca C Cox; Thomas Armstrong; Bunmi O Olatunji
Journal:  Clin Psychol Rev       Date:  2018-06-07

2.  The Role of Emotion Regulation in Reducing Emotional Distortions of Duration Perception.

Authors:  Yu Tian; Peiduo Liu; Xiting Huang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-03-15

3.  Furious snarling: Teeth-exposure and anxiety-related attentional bias towards angry faces.

Authors:  Benedikt Emanuel Wirth; Dirk Wentura
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-11-27       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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