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      When does hearing laughter draw attention to happy faces? Task relevance determines the influence of a crossmodal affective context on emotional attention

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          Abstract

          Prior evidence has shown that a person's affective context influences attention to emotional stimuli. The present study investigated whether a crossmodal affective context that is induced by remembering an emotional sound modulates attention to visual emotional stimuli. One group of participants had to remember a positive, negative, or neutral sound during each trial of a dot probe paradigm. A second group of participants also had to encode the valence of the sound. The results revealed that attention was preferentially deployed to stimuli that were emotionally congruent to the affective context. However, this effect was only evident when participants had to encode the valence of the affective context. These findings suggest that a crossmodal affective context modulates the deployment of attention to emotional stimuli provided that the affective connotation of the context is task-relevant.

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          Most cited references21

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          Attentional bias in emotional disorders.

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            Pain and emotion interactions in subregions of the cingulate gyrus.

            Brent Vogt (2005)
            Acute pain and emotion are processed in two forebrain networks, and the cingulate cortex is involved in both. Although Brodmann's cingulate gyrus had two divisions and was not based on any functional criteria, functional imaging studies still use this model. However, recent cytoarchitectural studies of the cingulate gyrus support a four-region model, with subregions, that is based on connections and qualitatively unique functions. Although the activity evoked by pain and emotion has been widely reported, some view them as emergent products of the brain rather than of small aggregates of neurons. Here, we assess pain and emotion in each cingulate subregion, and assess whether pain is co-localized with negative affect. Amazingly, these activation patterns do not simply overlap.
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              Emotion drives attention: detecting the snake in the grass.

              Participants searched for discrepant fear-relevant pictures (snakes or spiders) in grid-pattern arrays of fear-irrelevant pictures belonging to the same category (flowers or mushrooms) and vice versa. Fear-relevant pictures were found more quickly than fear-irrelevant ones. Fear-relevant, but not fear-irrelevant, search was unaffected by the location of the target in the display and by the number of distractors, which suggests parallel search for fear-relevant targets and serial search for fear-irrelevant targets. Participants specifically fearful of snakes but not spiders (or vice versa) showed facilitated search for the feared objects but did not differ from controls in search for nonfeared fear-relevant or fear-irrelevant, targets. Thus, evolutionary relevant threatening stimuli were effective in capturing attention, and this effect was further facilitated if the stimulus was emotionally provocative.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Front Hum Neurosci
                Front Hum Neurosci
                Front. Hum. Neurosci.
                Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1662-5161
                26 October 2012
                2012
                : 6
                : 294
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University Ghent, Belgium
                [2] 2Booth School of Business, University of Chicago Chicago, IL, USA
                Author notes

                Edited by: Luiz Pessoa, University of Maryland, USA

                Reviewed by: Chien-Te Wu, National Taiwan University College of Medicine, Taiwan; Gernot Horstmann, Bielefeld University, Germany; Tobias Brosch, University of Geneva, Switzerland

                *Correspondence: Pieter Van Dessel, Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University, Henri Dunantlaan 2, 9000 Ghent, Belgium. e-mail: pieter.vandessel@ 123456ugent.be
                Julia Vogt, Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, Room 373, 5807 S. Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL 60637, USA. e-mail: julia.vogt@ 123456chicagobooth.edu
                Article
                10.3389/fnhum.2012.00294
                3481060
                23112769
                ff04afaa-d643-4c47-86ab-78ff1abeb36f
                Copyright © 2012 Van Dessel and Vogt.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and subject to any copyright notices concerning any third-party graphics etc.

                History
                : 17 July 2012
                : 05 October 2012
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 1, Equations: 0, References: 38, Pages: 6, Words: 5399
                Categories
                Neuroscience
                Original Research Article

                Neurosciences
                crossmodality,affective context,emotional attention,attentional bias,task relevance
                Neurosciences
                crossmodality, affective context, emotional attention, attentional bias, task relevance

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