Affective stimuli capture attention regardless of categorical distinctiveness: An emotion-induced blindness study |
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Authors: | Briana L. Kennedy |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia b.kennedy@unsw.edu.au s.most@unsw.edu.au |
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Abstract: | Affective stimuli capture attention, whether their affective value stems from emotional content or a history of reward. The uniqueness of such stimuli within their experimental contexts might imbue them with an enhanced categorical distinctiveness that accounts for their impact on attention. Indeed, in emotion-induced blindness, categorically distinctive neutral pictures disrupt target perception, albeit to a lesser degree than do emotional pictures. Here, we manipulated the categorical distinctiveness of distractors in an emotion-induced blindness task. Participants searched within RSVP streams for a target that followed an emotional or a neutral distractor picture. In a categorically homogenous condition, all non-distractor items were exemplars from a uniform category, thus enhancing the distractor's categorical distinctiveness. In a categorically heterogeneous condition, each non-distractor item represented a distinct category. Neutral distractors disrupted target perception only in the homogenous condition, but emotional distractors did so regardless of their categorical distinctiveness. |
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Keywords: | Emotion-induced blindness Reward-driven capture Attentional capture Categorization |
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