Attentional capture by irrelevant emotional distractor faces.

We establish attentional capture by emotional distractor faces presented as a "singleton" in a search task in which the emotion is entirely irrelevant. Participants searched for a male (or female) target face among female (or male) faces and indicated whether the target face was tilted to the left or right. The presence (vs. absence) of an irrelevant emotional singleton expression (fearful, angry, or happy) in one of the distractor faces slowed search reaction times compared to the singleton absent or singleton target conditions. Facilitation for emotional singleton targets was found for the happy expression but not for the fearful or angry expressions. These effects were found irrespective of face gender and the failure of a singleton neutral face to capture attention among emotional faces rules out a visual odd-one-out account for the emotional capture. The present study thus establishes irrelevant, emotional, attentional capture.

[1]  R. Gur,et al.  The face in the crowd effect: anger superiority when using real faces and multiple identities. , 2010, Emotion.

[2]  Martin Eimer,et al.  Attentional capture by task-irrelevant fearful faces is revealed by the N2pc component , 2007, Biological Psychology.

[3]  A. Ohman,et al.  The face in the crowd revisited: a threat advantage with schematic stimuli. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  L. F. Barrett,et al.  Handbook of Emotions , 1993 .

[5]  Margarete Delazer,et al.  Gender differences in facial emotion recognition in persons with chronic schizophrenia , 2007, European Psychiatry.

[6]  E. Fox,et al.  Do threatening stimuli draw or hold visual attention in subclinical anxiety? , 2001, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[7]  J. Theeuwes Perceptual selectivity for color and form , 1992, Perception & psychophysics.

[8]  S. Gronlund,et al.  Top-down guidance in visual search for facial expressions , 2007, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[9]  P. Thompson,et al.  Margaret Thatcher: A New Illusion , 1980, Perception.

[10]  Dominique Lamy,et al.  Emotional priming of pop-out in visual search. , 2008, Emotion.

[11]  Daniel Lundqvist,et al.  Looking for foes and friends: perceptual and emotional factors when finding a face in the crowd. , 2005, Emotion.

[12]  K. Mogg,et al.  Orienting of Attention to Threatening Facial Expressions Presented under Conditions of Restricted Awareness , 1999 .

[13]  D. Carmel,et al.  Murder, She Wrote , 2009, Emotion.

[14]  J. Eastwood,et al.  Differential attentional guidance by unattended faces expressing positive and negative emotion , 2001, Perception & psychophysics.

[15]  C. H. Hansen,et al.  Finding the face in the crowd: an anger superiority effect. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[16]  Arne Öhman,et al.  Fear and anxiety as emotional phenomena: Clinical phenomenology, evolutionary perspectives, and information-processing mechanisms. , 1993 .

[17]  Stefanie I. Becker,et al.  Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? , 2008, Perception & psychophysics.

[18]  H. Egeth,et al.  Overriding stimulus-driven attentional capture , 1994, Perception & psychophysics.

[19]  G. Gendolla,et al.  Detecting emotional faces and features in a visual search paradigm: are faces special? , 2006, Emotion.

[20]  J. Theeuwes Stimulus-driven capture and attentional set: selective search for color and visual abrupt onsets. , 1994, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[21]  E. Fox,et al.  Attentional bias for threat: Evidence for delayed disengagement from emotional faces , 2002, Cognition & emotion.

[22]  J. Theeuwes Cross-dimensional perceptual selectivity , 1991, Perception & psychophysics.

[23]  J. Mattingley,et al.  Look at me, I'm smiling: Visual search for threatening and nonthreatening facial expressions , 2005 .

[24]  H. Wilson,et al.  Quantifying facial expression recognition across viewing conditions , 2006, Vision Research.

[25]  Daniel Lundqvist,et al.  Facilitated detection of angry faces: Initial orienting and processing efficiency , 2006 .

[26]  Jan Zwickel,et al.  The effect of fearful faces on the attentional blink is task dependent , 2009, Psychonomic bulletin & review.

[27]  J. Tanaka,et al.  The NimStim set of facial expressions: Judgments from untrained research participants , 2009, Psychiatry Research.

[28]  Daniel Smilek,et al.  Visual search is not blind to emotion , 2008, Perception & psychophysics.

[29]  M. Fenske,et al.  Modulation of focused attention by faces expressing emotion: evidence from flanker tasks. , 2003, Emotion.

[30]  C. Darwin,et al.  The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals , 1872 .