Of snakes and flowers: Does preferential detection of pictures of fear-relevant animals in visual search reflect on fear-relevance?


Autoria(s): Lipp, OV
Contribuinte(s)

E.A. Phelps

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

Previous research in visual search indicates that animal fear-relevant deviants, snakes/spiders, are found faster among non fear-relevant backgrounds, flowers/mushrooms, than vice versa. Moreover, deviant absence was indicated faster among snakes/spiders and detection time for flower/mushroom deviants, but not for snake/spider deviants, increased in larger arrays. The current research indicates that the latter 2 results do not reflect on fear-relevance, but are found only with flower/mushroom controls. These findings may reflect on factors such as background homogeneity, deviant homogeneity, or background-deviant similarity. The current research removes contradictions between previous studies that used animal and social fear-relevant stimuli and indicates that apparent search advantages for fear-relevant deviants seem likely to reflect on delayed attentional disengagement from fear-relevance on control trials.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:80487

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Psychological Assoc/Educational Publishing Foundation

Palavras-Chave #Anxiety #Fear-relevance #Visual Search #Psychology, Experimental #Facial Expressions #Masked Stimuli #Eye-movements #Angry Faces #Responses #Threat #Emotion #Attention #Crowd #C1 #780108 Behavioural and cognitive sciences #380102 Learning, Memory, Cognition and Language
Tipo

Journal Article