A target word is classified faster as pleasant or unpleasant if preceded by a prime that matches the target word’s valence. This affective priming phenomenon is currently popular as an implicit measure of stimulus valence. The present set of experiments investigated whether rated stimulus arousal will affect target classification as well. In three experiments, word targets were preceded by prime stimuli that differed in rated arousal and valence. The basic priming effect was replicated in all experiments, however, priming was largest after high arousal unpleasant and low arousal pleasant primes, and reduced after low arousal unpleasant and high arousal pleasant primes. This finding emerged for picture and word primes and does not reflect th...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In studies on affective priming of pronunciation responses, two words are presented on each trial an...
The arousal value of a stimulus influences its salience, whereby higher arousal should lead to faste...
Current models of affective processing postulate that not only valence but also the arousal dimensio...
The affective priming paradigm has been studied extensively and applied in many fields during the pa...
Three experiments explored the effect of affectively congruent or incongruent primes on evaluation r...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Abstract only availableResearch has consistently shown that participants are faster to categorize th...
In studies on affective priming of pronunciation responses, participants are asked to read target wo...
Fazio, Sanbonmatsu Powell, & Kardes, (1986) demonstrated that less time is needed to affectively...
In two experiments, the automatic processing of evaluative information was investigated using a mask...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In studies on affective priming of pronunciation responses, two words are presented on each trial an...
The arousal value of a stimulus influences its salience, whereby higher arousal should lead to faste...
Current models of affective processing postulate that not only valence but also the arousal dimensio...
The affective priming paradigm has been studied extensively and applied in many fields during the pa...
Three experiments explored the effect of affectively congruent or incongruent primes on evaluation r...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Affective priming studies showed that responses to targets are faster when they are preceded by a pr...
Abstract only availableResearch has consistently shown that participants are faster to categorize th...
In studies on affective priming of pronunciation responses, participants are asked to read target wo...
Fazio, Sanbonmatsu Powell, & Kardes, (1986) demonstrated that less time is needed to affectively...
In two experiments, the automatic processing of evaluative information was investigated using a mask...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In the affective-priming paradigm, target stimuli are preceded by evaluatively polarized prime stimu...
In studies on affective priming of pronunciation responses, two words are presented on each trial an...
The arousal value of a stimulus influences its salience, whereby higher arousal should lead to faste...