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- Laura Pasqualette and Louisa Kulke.
- Developmental Psychology with Educational Psychology, Bremen University, Bremen, Germany; Neurocognitive Developmental Psychology, Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Erlangen, Germany.
- Neuroscience. 2024 Nov 1; 559: 283292283-292.
AbstractIn daily life, individuals pay attention to emotional facial expressions and dynamically choose how to shift their attention, i.e. either overtly (with eye-movements) or covertly (without eye-movements). However, research on attention to emotional faces has mostly been conducted in controlled laboratory settings, in which people were instructed where to look. The current preregistered study co-registered EEG and eye-tracking to investigate differences in emotion-driven attention between instructed and uninstructed natural attention shifts in 48 adults. While a central stimulus was presented to the participant, a face appeared in the periphery, showing either a happy, neutral or an angry expression. In three counterbalanced blocks participants were instructed to either move their eyes overtly to the peripheral face, keep fixating the center and therefore covertly shift their attention, or freely look wherever they would like to look. We found that emotional content had stronger effects on the amplitude of the Early Posterior Negativity when participants shifted attention naturally, and that natural shifts of attention differed from instructed shifts in both saccade behavior and neural mechanisms. In summary, our results emphasize the importance of investigating modulation of attention using paradigms that allow participants to allocate their attention naturally.Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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