Threatening stimuli seem to capture attention more swiftly than neutral stimuli. This attention bias has been observed under different experimental conditions and with different types of stimuli. It remains unclear whether this adaptive behaviour reflects the function of automatic or controlled attention mechanisms. Additionally, the spatiotemporal dynamics of its neural correlates are largely unknown. The present study investigates these issues using an Emotional Flanker Task synchronized with EEG recordings. A group of 32 healthy participants saw response-relevant images (emotional scenes from IAPS or line drawings of objects) flanked by response-irrelevant distracters (i.e., emotional scenes flanked by line drawings or vice versa). We as...
Effective processing of threat-related stimuli is of significant evolutionary advantage. Given the i...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Threatening stimuli seem to capture attention more swiftly than neutral stimuli. This attention bias...
Attention is biased towards threat-related stimuli. In three experiments, we investigated the mechan...
In this study, we investigated the time course of attentional bias for threat-related (angry) facial...
This study investigated the temporal course of attentional biases for threat-related (angry) and pos...
Emotionally arousing stimuli are known to rapidly draw the brain's processing resources, even when t...
BACKGROUND: Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that emotional...
Abstract Background Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that e...
BACKGROUND: Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that emotional...
Previous research shows that dynamic stimuli, on the one hand, and emotional stimuli, on the other, ...
We investigated how viewing task-irrelevant emotional pictures affects the performance of a subseque...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Previous research shows that dynamic stimuli, on the one hand, and emotional stimuli, on the other, ...
Effective processing of threat-related stimuli is of significant evolutionary advantage. Given the i...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Threatening stimuli seem to capture attention more swiftly than neutral stimuli. This attention bias...
Attention is biased towards threat-related stimuli. In three experiments, we investigated the mechan...
In this study, we investigated the time course of attentional bias for threat-related (angry) facial...
This study investigated the temporal course of attentional biases for threat-related (angry) and pos...
Emotionally arousing stimuli are known to rapidly draw the brain's processing resources, even when t...
BACKGROUND: Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that emotional...
Abstract Background Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that e...
BACKGROUND: Brain imaging and event-related potential studies provide strong evidence that emotional...
Previous research shows that dynamic stimuli, on the one hand, and emotional stimuli, on the other, ...
We investigated how viewing task-irrelevant emotional pictures affects the performance of a subseque...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Previous research shows that dynamic stimuli, on the one hand, and emotional stimuli, on the other, ...
Effective processing of threat-related stimuli is of significant evolutionary advantage. Given the i...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...
Emotion processing has been shown to acquire priority by biasing allocation of attentional resources...