This study investigated the temporal course of attentional biases for threat-related (angry) and positive (happy) facial expressions. Electrophysiological (event-related potential) and behavioral (reaction time [RT]) data were recorded while participants viewed pairs of faces (e.g., angry face paired with neutral face) shown for 500 ms and followed by a probe. Behavioral results indicated that RTs were faster to probes replacing emotional versus neutral faces, consistent with an attentional bias for emotional information. Electrophysiological results revealed that attentional orienting to threatening faces emerged earlier (early N2pc time window; 180-250 ms) than orienting to positive faces (after 250 ms), and that attention was sustained t...
Rapid and accurate identification of emotionally meaningful stimuli has important benefits related t...
Given finite attentional resources, how emotional aspects of stimuli are processed automatically is ...
The present paper reports three new experiments suggesting that the valence of a face cue can influe...
Attention is believed to be biased toward threatening objects or faces. Therefore, we tested whether...
In this study, we investigated the time course of attentional bias for threat-related (angry) facial...
With the face-in-the-crowd task, a visual search paradigm, it was shown that searching for an angry ...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
We investigated the interplay of the perception of emotion and the allocation of attentional resourc...
Neuroimaging data suggest that emotional information, especially threatening faces, automatically ca...
Threatening stimuli seem to capture attention more swiftly than neutral stimuli. This attention bias...
The processing of fearful facial expressions is prioritized by the human brain. This priority is mai...
The goal of this study was to examine behavioral and electrophysiological correlates of involuntary ...
Rapid and accurate identification of emotionally meaningful stimuli has important benefits related t...
Given finite attentional resources, how emotional aspects of stimuli are processed automatically is ...
The present paper reports three new experiments suggesting that the valence of a face cue can influe...
Attention is believed to be biased toward threatening objects or faces. Therefore, we tested whether...
In this study, we investigated the time course of attentional bias for threat-related (angry) facial...
With the face-in-the-crowd task, a visual search paradigm, it was shown that searching for an angry ...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
A number of studies using the dot-probe task now report the existence of an attentional bias to angr...
We investigated the interplay of the perception of emotion and the allocation of attentional resourc...
Neuroimaging data suggest that emotional information, especially threatening faces, automatically ca...
Threatening stimuli seem to capture attention more swiftly than neutral stimuli. This attention bias...
The processing of fearful facial expressions is prioritized by the human brain. This priority is mai...
The goal of this study was to examine behavioral and electrophysiological correlates of involuntary ...
Rapid and accurate identification of emotionally meaningful stimuli has important benefits related t...
Given finite attentional resources, how emotional aspects of stimuli are processed automatically is ...
The present paper reports three new experiments suggesting that the valence of a face cue can influe...