Threatening stimuli are thought to bias spatial attention toward the location from which the threat is presented. Although this effect is well-established in the visual domain, little is known regarding whether tactile attention is similarly affected by threatening pictures. We hypothesised that tactile attention might be more affected by cues implying physical threat to a person's bodily tissues than by cues implying general threat. In the present study, participants made temporal order judgments (TOJs) concerning which of a pair of tactile (or auditory) stimuli, one presented to either hand, at a range of inter-stimulus intervals, had been presented first. A picture (showing physical threat, general threat, or no threat) was presented in ...
We examined whether or not abrupt tactile onsets are capable of exogenously capturing tactile spatia...
This study addressed the role of proprioceptive and visual cues to body posture during the deploymen...
Stimuli signaling threat are often processed especially rapidly (e.g., Fox, Russo, & Dutton, 2002).\...
Viewing a threatening stimulus can bias visual attention toward that location. Such effects have typ...
Although attention can be captured toward high-arousal stimuli, little is known about how perceiving...
The present study rigorously tests whether an arbitrary stimulus that signals threat affects attenti...
The region surrounding our body (i.e. peripersonal space) is coded in a multimodal representation by...
Recently, Vanden Bulcke, Crombez, Durnez, and Van Damme (2015) investigated whether the attentional ...
Reaching with the hand is characterized by a decrease in sensitivity to tactile stimuli presented to...
The human brain is adapted to integrate the information from multiple sensory modalities into cohere...
Effective processing of threat-related stimuli is of significant evolutionary advantage. Given the i...
Previous research has revealed that anticipating pain at a particular location of the body prioritiz...
The human brain is adapted to integrate the information from multiple sensory modalities into cohere...
The last few years have seen a rapid growth of research on the topic of tactile attention. We review...
Peripheral cues are thought to facilitate responses to stimuli presented at the same location becaus...
We examined whether or not abrupt tactile onsets are capable of exogenously capturing tactile spatia...
This study addressed the role of proprioceptive and visual cues to body posture during the deploymen...
Stimuli signaling threat are often processed especially rapidly (e.g., Fox, Russo, & Dutton, 2002).\...
Viewing a threatening stimulus can bias visual attention toward that location. Such effects have typ...
Although attention can be captured toward high-arousal stimuli, little is known about how perceiving...
The present study rigorously tests whether an arbitrary stimulus that signals threat affects attenti...
The region surrounding our body (i.e. peripersonal space) is coded in a multimodal representation by...
Recently, Vanden Bulcke, Crombez, Durnez, and Van Damme (2015) investigated whether the attentional ...
Reaching with the hand is characterized by a decrease in sensitivity to tactile stimuli presented to...
The human brain is adapted to integrate the information from multiple sensory modalities into cohere...
Effective processing of threat-related stimuli is of significant evolutionary advantage. Given the i...
Previous research has revealed that anticipating pain at a particular location of the body prioritiz...
The human brain is adapted to integrate the information from multiple sensory modalities into cohere...
The last few years have seen a rapid growth of research on the topic of tactile attention. We review...
Peripheral cues are thought to facilitate responses to stimuli presented at the same location becaus...
We examined whether or not abrupt tactile onsets are capable of exogenously capturing tactile spatia...
This study addressed the role of proprioceptive and visual cues to body posture during the deploymen...
Stimuli signaling threat are often processed especially rapidly (e.g., Fox, Russo, & Dutton, 2002).\...