Authors
Paola Perone, D Vaughn Becker, Joshua M Tybur
Publication date
2021/6
Journal
Emotion
Volume
21
Issue
4
Pages
871
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Multiple studies report that disgust-eliciting stimuli are perceived as salient and subsequently capture selective attention. In the current study, we aimed to better understand the nature of temporal attentional biases toward disgust-eliciting stimuli and to investigate the extent to which these biases are sensitive to contextual and trait-level pathogen avoidance motives. Participants (N= 116) performed in an emotional attentional blink task in which task-irrelevant disgust-eliciting, fear-eliciting, or neutral images preceded a target by 200, 500, or 800 ms (ie, lag 2, 5 and 8, respectively). They did so twice—once while not exposed to an odor and once while exposed to either an odor that elicited disgust or an odor that did not—and completed a measure of disgust sensitivity. Results indicate that disgust-eliciting visual stimuli produced a greater attentional blink than neutral visual stimuli at lag 2 and a greater attentional blink …
Total citations
20212022202320243871