The body language: The spontaneous influence of congruent bodily arousal on the awareness of emotional words


Autoria(s): Kever, Anne; Gryndberg, Delphine; Eeckhout, Coralie; Mermillod, Martial; Fantini-Hauwel, Carole; Vermeulen, Nicolas
Resumo

Nowadays, the idea of a reciprocal influence of physiological and psychological processes seems to be widely accepted. For instance, current theories of embodied emotion suggest that knowledge about an emotion concept involves simulations of bodily experienced emotional states relevant to the concept. In line with this framework, the present study investigated whether actual levels of physiological arousal interact with the processing of emotional words. Participants performed 2 blocks of an attentional blink task, once after a cycling session (increased arousal) and once after a relaxation session (reduced arousal). Concretely, participants were instructed to detect and report 2 target words (T1 and T2) presented among a series of nonword distractors. T1 and T2 were either neutral, high arousal, or low arousal words. Results revealed that increased physiological arousal led to improved reports of high arousal T2 words, whereas reduced physiological arousal led to improved reports of low arousal T2 words. Neutral T2 remained unaffected by the arousing conditions. These findings emphasize that actual levels of physiological arousal modulate the cognitive access to arousal (in-)congruent emotional concepts and suggest a direct grounding of emotion knowledge in our bodily systems of arousal.

SCOPUS: ar.j

info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Formato

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Identificador

uri/info:doi/10.1037/xhp0000055

http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/196242

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance

Palavras-Chave #Psychologie expérimentale #Awareness #Embodiment #Emotion #Heart rate variability #Physiological arousal
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

info:ulb-repo/semantics/articlePeerReview

info:ulb-repo/semantics/openurl/article

Data(s)

2015