Negative and Positive Bias for Emotional Faces: Evidence from the Attention and Working Memory Paradigms

Author:

Xu Qianru12ORCID,Ye Chaoxiong12ORCID,Gu Simeng13,Hu Zhonghua1,Lei Yi1,Li Xueyan4,Huang Lihui5,Liu Qiang1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Brain and Psychological Sciences, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu, China

2. Department of Psychology, University of Jyvaskyla, Jyväskylä, Finland

3. Department of Medical Psychology, Jiangsu University Medical School, Zhenjiang, China

4. School of Foreign Languages, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, China

5. Faculty of Education, Sichuan Normal University, Chengdu, China

Abstract

Visual attention and visual working memory (VWM) are two major cognitive functions in humans, and they have much in common. A growing body of research has investigated the effect of emotional information on visual attention and VWM. Interestingly, contradictory findings have supported both a negative bias and a positive bias toward emotional faces (e.g., angry faces or happy faces) in the attention and VWM fields. We found that the classical paradigms—that is, the visual search paradigm in attention and the change detection paradigm in VWM—are considerably similar. The settings of these paradigms could therefore be responsible for the contradictory results. In this paper, we compare previous controversial results from behavioral and neuroscience studies using these two paradigms. We suggest three possible contributing factors that have significant impacts on the contradictory conclusions regarding different emotional bias effects; these factors are stimulus choice, experimental setting, and cognitive process. We also propose new research directions and guidelines for future studies.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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