The anti-saccade paradigm has been a favourite among researchers of attention and the control of eye movements. Most pro/anti-saccade studies have utilized meaningless stimuli, though stimulus meaning is known to have an impact on looking behaviour in free viewing conditions. Here, we explore the role of content in the control of pro/antisaccades by contrasting two alternative views on the impact of emotional stimuli. One view supports an "informativeness" hypothesis, where visual processing is directed towards threatening stimuli, suggesting that RT should be particularly large for negative, high arousal pictures in an antisaccade task. An alternative view emphasizes approach and withdrawal behaviours. Here negative images are thought to e...
Successful emotion regulation is important for maintaining psychological well-being. Although it is ...
In natural vision both stimulus features and cognitive/affective factors influence an observer's att...
<div><p>Eyeblinks, whether reflexive or voluntary, play an important role in protecting our vision. ...
Consistent with a negativity bias account, neuroscientific and behavioral evidence demonstrates modu...
In picture viewing, emotional vs. neutral stimuli could play a different role in eye movement parame...
International audienceA large number of previous studies showed that emotional stimuli engage more a...
International audiencePrevious studies have shown that the human visual system can detect a face and...
Eye movements reflect the dynamic interplay between top-down-and bottom-up-driven processes. For exa...
Visual attention is the process that enables us to select relevant visual stimuli in our environment...
Faces attract our attention more than other visual stimuli. Previous studies (i.e., Morand et al., i...
The Emotional Blink of Attention paradigm reveals a significant relationship between emotion and att...
Human faces capture attention more than other visual stimuli. Here we investigated whether such face...
When we observe a scene, we shift our gaze to different points of interest via saccadic eye movement...
Visual stimuli with emotional content appearing in close temporal proximity either before or after a...
AbstractThe present study investigated oculomotor inhibition of emotional faces as indicated by sacc...
Successful emotion regulation is important for maintaining psychological well-being. Although it is ...
In natural vision both stimulus features and cognitive/affective factors influence an observer's att...
<div><p>Eyeblinks, whether reflexive or voluntary, play an important role in protecting our vision. ...
Consistent with a negativity bias account, neuroscientific and behavioral evidence demonstrates modu...
In picture viewing, emotional vs. neutral stimuli could play a different role in eye movement parame...
International audienceA large number of previous studies showed that emotional stimuli engage more a...
International audiencePrevious studies have shown that the human visual system can detect a face and...
Eye movements reflect the dynamic interplay between top-down-and bottom-up-driven processes. For exa...
Visual attention is the process that enables us to select relevant visual stimuli in our environment...
Faces attract our attention more than other visual stimuli. Previous studies (i.e., Morand et al., i...
The Emotional Blink of Attention paradigm reveals a significant relationship between emotion and att...
Human faces capture attention more than other visual stimuli. Here we investigated whether such face...
When we observe a scene, we shift our gaze to different points of interest via saccadic eye movement...
Visual stimuli with emotional content appearing in close temporal proximity either before or after a...
AbstractThe present study investigated oculomotor inhibition of emotional faces as indicated by sacc...
Successful emotion regulation is important for maintaining psychological well-being. Although it is ...
In natural vision both stimulus features and cognitive/affective factors influence an observer's att...
<div><p>Eyeblinks, whether reflexive or voluntary, play an important role in protecting our vision. ...