We report a study in which faces with a neutral emotional expression were shown on a computer screen. By means of a joystick, participants pulled half of the faces closer (positive approach movement), and pushed the half away (negative avoidance movement). As a result, an operant evaluative conditioning effect occurred in a subsequent affective priming task: Participants responded more quickly to positive target words if they were preceded by a previously pulled face than a pushed face, and vice versa for negative target words. The effect became stronger the more often the faces had been trained to approach or to avoid. No effect was observed on explicit evaluations of the faces: Pushed faces were rated as sympathetic as pulled ones
Implicit social-affective biases-reflected in a propensity to approach positive and avoid negative s...
The Approach/Avoidance Task (AAT; Rinck & Becker, 2007) assesses approach and avoidance motivational...
Affective priming studies have demonstrated that most stimuli are unintentionally, and in that sense...
Contains fulltext : 73234.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We report a st...
The present research aimed to replicate and extend findings of Huijding, Muris, Lester, Field, and J...
Woud, Becker, and Rinck (2008) asked participants to repeatedly push pictures of certain faces away ...
Approach action tendencies towards positive stimuli and avoidance tendencies from negative stimuli a...
Tendencies of approach and avoidance seem to be a universal characteristic of humans. Specifically, ...
Two studies tested whether affective stimuli presented auditorily spontaneously trigger approach/avo...
This study examined whether approach-avoidance related behaviour elicited by facial affect is modera...
Vandenbosch and De Houwer (this issue) reported a series of failures to induce an implicit evaluatio...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
Emotional tears have been proposed to represent a robust affiliative signal whose main function is t...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a certain stimulus changes the likin...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
Implicit social-affective biases-reflected in a propensity to approach positive and avoid negative s...
The Approach/Avoidance Task (AAT; Rinck & Becker, 2007) assesses approach and avoidance motivational...
Affective priming studies have demonstrated that most stimuli are unintentionally, and in that sense...
Contains fulltext : 73234.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)We report a st...
The present research aimed to replicate and extend findings of Huijding, Muris, Lester, Field, and J...
Woud, Becker, and Rinck (2008) asked participants to repeatedly push pictures of certain faces away ...
Approach action tendencies towards positive stimuli and avoidance tendencies from negative stimuli a...
Tendencies of approach and avoidance seem to be a universal characteristic of humans. Specifically, ...
Two studies tested whether affective stimuli presented auditorily spontaneously trigger approach/avo...
This study examined whether approach-avoidance related behaviour elicited by facial affect is modera...
Vandenbosch and De Houwer (this issue) reported a series of failures to induce an implicit evaluatio...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
Emotional tears have been proposed to represent a robust affiliative signal whose main function is t...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a certain stimulus changes the likin...
Prior research suggests that repeatedly approaching or avoiding a stimulus changes the liking of tha...
Implicit social-affective biases-reflected in a propensity to approach positive and avoid negative s...
The Approach/Avoidance Task (AAT; Rinck & Becker, 2007) assesses approach and avoidance motivational...
Affective priming studies have demonstrated that most stimuli are unintentionally, and in that sense...