Emotion effects during reading: Influence of an emotion target word on eye movements and processing |
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Authors: | Hugh Knickerbocker Rebecca L. Johnson Jeanette Altarriba |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY, USAhknickerbocker@albany.edu;3. Department of Psychology, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY, USA;4. Department of Psychology, University at Albany, SUNY, Albany, NY, USA |
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Abstract: | Recently, Scott, O'Donnell and Sereno reported that words of high valence and arousal are processed with greater ease than neutral words during sentence reading. However, this study unsystematically intermixed emotion (label a state of mind, e.g., terrified or happy) and emotion-laden words (refer to a concept that is associated with an emotional state, e.g., debt or marriage). We compared the eye-movement record while participants read sentences that contained a neutral target word (e.g., chair) or an emotion word (no emotion-laden words were included). Readers were able to process both positive (e.g., happy) and negative emotion words (e.g., distressed) faster than neutral words. This was true across a wide range of early (e.g., first fixation durations) and late (e.g., total times on the post-target region) measures. Additional analyses revealed that State Trait Anxiety Inventory scores interacted with the emotion effect and that the emotion effect was not due to arousal alone. |
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Keywords: | Emotion Eye movement Reading |
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