Acquisition of negative valence and modified attentional processing by non fear relevant stimuli


Autoria(s): Purkis, H. M.; Lipp, O. V.
Contribuinte(s)

M. Bradley

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

The current research examined valence and attentional processing of a priori fear relevant stimuli and investigated the extent to which these characteristics can be acquired by non fear relevant stimuli across an aversive learning episode. The first experiment compared pictures of snakes and spiders with pictures of birds and fish using affective priming, visual search and detection of a dot probe. Snakes and spiders were more negative than birds and fish as indexed by affective priming, and were preferentially attended to in the visual search task. The second experiment exposed the non fear relevant animal pictures, birds and fish, in an aversive learning episode involving an aversive shock US. Skin conductance responding was measured during acquisition. After acquisition, conditioned non fear relevant animal stimuli, CS1, and non conditioned, non fear relevant animal stimuli, CS, were compared across affective priming, visual search and dot probe tasks. During acquisition, skin conductance responses were larger during CS1 than during CS across all three response intervals. After acquisition, CS1 non fear relevant animal pictures were more negative than CS non fear relevant animal pictures as indexed by affective priming, and were preferentially attended to in a dot probe task. These studies provide evidence that negative valence and modified attentional processing can be acquired in a brief aversive learning episode.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:79293

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #valence #attentional processing #fear relevance #CX #380102 Learning, Memory, Cognition and Language #780108 Behavioural and cognitive sciences
Tipo

Conference Paper