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(Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 2007;19:1316-1322.)
© 2007 The MIT Press

Efficient Attentional Selection Predicts Distractor Devaluation: Event-related Potential Evidence for a Direct Link between Attention and Emotion

Monika Kiss1, Brian A. Goolsby2, Jane E. Raymond2, Kimron L. Shapiro2, Laetitia Silvert3, Anna C. Nobre3, Nickolaos Fragopanagos4, John G. Taylor4 and Martin Eimer1

1 Birkbeck College London, 2 University of Wales, 3 University of Oxford, 4 King's College London

Reprint requests should be sent to Monika Kiss, School of Psychology, Birkbeck College, University of London, Malet Street, London WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom, or via e-mail: m.kiss{at}bbk.ac.uk.

Links between attention and emotion were investigated by obtaining electrophysiological measures of attentional selectivity together with behavioral measures of affective evaluation. Participants were asked to rate faces that had just been presented as targets or distractors in a visual search task. Distractors were rated as less trustworthy than targets. To study the association between the efficiency of selective attention during visual search and subsequent emotional responses, the N2pc component was quantified as a function of evaluative judgments. Evaluation of distractor faces (but not target faces) covaried with selective attention. On trials where distractors were later judged negatively, the N2pc emerged earlier, demonstrating that attention was strongly biased toward target events, and distractors were effectively inhibited. When previous distractors were judged positively, the N2pc was delayed, indicating unfocused attention to the target and less distractor suppression. Variations in attentional selectivity across trials can predict subsequent emotional responses, strongly suggesting that attention is closely associated with subsequent affective evaluation.




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M. Eimer and M. Kiss
Involuntary Attentional Capture is Determined by Task Set: Evidence from Event-related Brain Potentials
J. Cogn. Neurosci., August 1, 2008; 20(8): 1423 - 1433.
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