Article (Scientific journals)
Angry faces hold the eyes
Belopolsky, Artem; Devue, Christel; Theeuwes, Jan
2011In Visual Cognition, 19, p. 27-36
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Keywords :
emotions; saccades; disengagement; threat; facial expressions
Abstract :
[en] Efficient processing of complex social and biological stimuli associated with threat is crucial for survival. Previous studies have suggested that threatening stimuli such as angry faces not only capture visual attention, but also delay the disengagement of attention from their location. However, in the previous studies disengagement of attention was measured indirectly and was inferred on the basis of delayed manual responses. The present study employed a novel paradigm that allows to directly examine the delayed disengagement hypothesis by measuring the time it takes to disengage the eyes from threatening stimuli. The results showed that participants were indeed slower to make an eye movement away from an angry face presented at fixation than from either a neutral or a happy face. This finding provides converging support that the delay in disengagement of attention is an important component of processing threatening information.
Disciplines :
Theoretical & cognitive psychology
Author, co-author :
Belopolsky, Artem
Devue, Christel ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département des sciences cognitives > Psychologie cognitive
Theeuwes, Jan
Language :
English
Title :
Angry faces hold the eyes
Publication date :
2011
Journal title :
Visual Cognition
ISSN :
1350-6285
eISSN :
1464-0716
Publisher :
Psychology Press (UK)
Volume :
19
Pages :
27-36
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 17 February 2011

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