Some research suggests that positive and negative valence stimuli may be processed differently. For example, negative material may capture and hold attention more readily than equally arousing positive material. This is called the negativity bias, and it has been observed as both behavioural and electroencephalographic (EEG) effects. Consequently, it has been attributed to both automatic and elaborative processes. However, at the lowest levels of arousal, faster reaction times and stronger EEG responses to positive material have been observed. This is called the positivity offset, and the underlying cognitive mechanism is less understood. To study the role of selective attention in the positivity offset, participants completed a negati...
International audienceBackground and Objectives: We test the effect of a new attentional bias modifi...
It is widely believed that negative information is psychologically more meaningful than positive inf...
Emotional information is treated differently than any other type of information and has a powerful i...
Some research suggests that positive and negative valence stimuli may be processed differently. For ...
Negative faces are detected more quickly but categorized more slowly than positive faces. Using a Si...
Arousal Biased Competition theory suggests that arousal enhances competitive attentional processes, ...
There is current dispute over the origins, incidence and development of Positivity Bias, i.e., prefe...
AbstractEmotional stimuli tend to capture attention, and this so-called motivated attention is commo...
In models of affect and cognition it is held that positive affect broadens the scope of attention. C...
There is a current dispute over the origins, incidence, and development of Positivity Bias, i.e., pr...
Previous research has shown that negative stimuli elicit more attention than do positive stimuli. Ho...
Recent evidence has suggested that not only stimulus-specific attributes or top-down expectations ca...
Despite an initial focus on negative threatening stimuli, researchers have more recently expanded th...
A series of computer simulations using variants of a formal model of attention (Melara and Algom, 20...
AbstractAttention is captured more strongly by emotional pictures than by neutral pictures. This all...
International audienceBackground and Objectives: We test the effect of a new attentional bias modifi...
It is widely believed that negative information is psychologically more meaningful than positive inf...
Emotional information is treated differently than any other type of information and has a powerful i...
Some research suggests that positive and negative valence stimuli may be processed differently. For ...
Negative faces are detected more quickly but categorized more slowly than positive faces. Using a Si...
Arousal Biased Competition theory suggests that arousal enhances competitive attentional processes, ...
There is current dispute over the origins, incidence and development of Positivity Bias, i.e., prefe...
AbstractEmotional stimuli tend to capture attention, and this so-called motivated attention is commo...
In models of affect and cognition it is held that positive affect broadens the scope of attention. C...
There is a current dispute over the origins, incidence, and development of Positivity Bias, i.e., pr...
Previous research has shown that negative stimuli elicit more attention than do positive stimuli. Ho...
Recent evidence has suggested that not only stimulus-specific attributes or top-down expectations ca...
Despite an initial focus on negative threatening stimuli, researchers have more recently expanded th...
A series of computer simulations using variants of a formal model of attention (Melara and Algom, 20...
AbstractAttention is captured more strongly by emotional pictures than by neutral pictures. This all...
International audienceBackground and Objectives: We test the effect of a new attentional bias modifi...
It is widely believed that negative information is psychologically more meaningful than positive inf...
Emotional information is treated differently than any other type of information and has a powerful i...