Effects of implicit power motive on the processing of anger faces: An event-related potential study |
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Authors: | Jianfeng Wang Lei Liu Yong Zheng |
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Affiliation: | aKey Laboratory of Cognition and Personality (Southwest University), Ministry of Education, Chongqing 400715, China;bSchool of Psychology, Southwest University, Chongqing 400715, China |
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Abstract: | Implicit motives are one form of motivation that regulates cognitive and emotional processing. In this study, we investigated the impact of implicit power motive (nPower) on the processing of anger faces. Event-related potentials were recorded while high- and low-nPower individuals performed a face version of an emotion Stroop task comprised of anger and neutral faces. It was found that nPower does not modify early perceptual and attentional components (P2 and N2), but a later component is affected. Indeed, power-motivated participants showed enhanced P3/LPPs (Late positive potentials) amplitude compared to low-nPower subjects, in response to anger stimuli. These findings demonstrate that anger faces have greater salience for high-nPower individuals and are subject to a more salient, conscious processing. |
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Keywords: | Implicit motives Anger faces Power Attentional bias Event-related potentials |
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