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Divided attention enhances the recognition of emotional stimuli: evidence from the attentional boost effect
Authors:Clelia Rossi-Arnaud  Pietro Spataro  Marco Costanzi  Daniele Saraulli
Institution:1. Department of Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy;2. Cell Biology and Neurobiology Institute, C.N.R. National Research Council of Italy, Rome, Italy;3. Department of Human Sciences, University LUMSA of Rome, Rome, Italy
Abstract:The present study examined predictions of the early-phase-elevated-attention hypothesis of the attentional boost effect (ABE), which suggests that transient increases in attention at encoding, as instantiated in the ABE paradigm, should enhance the recognition of neutral and positive items (whose encoding is mostly based on controlled processes), while having small or null effects on the recognition of negative items (whose encoding is primarily based on automatic processes). Participants were presented a sequence of negative, neutral and positive stimuli (pictures in Experiment 1, words in Experiment 2) associated to target (red) squares, distractor (green) squares or no squares (baseline condition). They were told to attend to the pictures/words and simultaneously press the spacebar of the computer when a red square appeared. In a later recognition task, stimuli associated to target squares were recognised better than stimuli associated to distractor squares, replicating the standard ABE. More importantly, we also found that: (a) the memory enhancement following target detection occurred with all types of stimuli (neutral, negative and positive) and (b) the advantage of negative stimuli over neutral stimuli was intact in the DA condition. These findings suggest that the encoding of negative stimuli depends on both controlled (attention-dependent) and automatic (attention-independent) processes.
Keywords:Attention  emotion  recognition  memory  valence  arousal
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