Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention

It has long been held that processing at the single word level during reading is automatic. However, research has recently begun to emerge that challenges this view. The literature surrounding the processing of emotion while recognizing printed words is limited, but some findings in the processing o...

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Main Author: Haskell, Christie Rose Marie
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7515
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-75152013-10-04T04:12:25ZHaskell, Christie Rose Marie2013-05-02T19:24:17Z2013-05-02T19:24:17Z2013-05-02T19:24:17Z2013http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7515It has long been held that processing at the single word level during reading is automatic. However, research has recently begun to emerge that challenges this view. The literature surrounding the processing of emotion while recognizing printed words is limited, but some findings in the processing of emotion in faces suggest that negative stimuli (especially threat stimuli) promote quick and accurate processing. The purpose of the present experiments is to investigate whether negative emotionally-laden words are afforded priority processing in visual word recognition compared to positive emotionally-laden words. Two experiments are reported that manipulated the lexicality and valence of the target and distractor stimuli (Experiments 1 & 2), the validity of a spatial pre-cue (Experiments 1 & 2), and the presence of a distractor item (Experiment 2). Participants were asked to determine whether the target stimulus spelled a word or not. Response times on valid trials were faster compared to invalid trials, response times to negative emotionally-laden words were slower compared to positive emotionally-laden words, and the presence of a distractor item encouraged better focus on the target stimuli in the absence of any evidence that the valence of the distractor itself was processed. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that visual word recognition is not automatic given that processing benefited from the accurate direction of spatial attention. Furthermore, negative emotionally-laden words benefited equally compared to positive emotionally-laden words and therefore provide no evidence of automatic processing.encognitionvisual word recognitionemotionlexical decisionspatial cueingautomaticityreadingword valenceBarking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of AttentionThesis or DissertationPsychologyMaster of ArtsPsychology
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic cognition
visual word recognition
emotion
lexical decision
spatial cueing
automaticity
reading
word valence
Psychology
spellingShingle cognition
visual word recognition
emotion
lexical decision
spatial cueing
automaticity
reading
word valence
Psychology
Haskell, Christie Rose Marie
Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
description It has long been held that processing at the single word level during reading is automatic. However, research has recently begun to emerge that challenges this view. The literature surrounding the processing of emotion while recognizing printed words is limited, but some findings in the processing of emotion in faces suggest that negative stimuli (especially threat stimuli) promote quick and accurate processing. The purpose of the present experiments is to investigate whether negative emotionally-laden words are afforded priority processing in visual word recognition compared to positive emotionally-laden words. Two experiments are reported that manipulated the lexicality and valence of the target and distractor stimuli (Experiments 1 & 2), the validity of a spatial pre-cue (Experiments 1 & 2), and the presence of a distractor item (Experiment 2). Participants were asked to determine whether the target stimulus spelled a word or not. Response times on valid trials were faster compared to invalid trials, response times to negative emotionally-laden words were slower compared to positive emotionally-laden words, and the presence of a distractor item encouraged better focus on the target stimuli in the absence of any evidence that the valence of the distractor itself was processed. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that visual word recognition is not automatic given that processing benefited from the accurate direction of spatial attention. Furthermore, negative emotionally-laden words benefited equally compared to positive emotionally-laden words and therefore provide no evidence of automatic processing.
author Haskell, Christie Rose Marie
author_facet Haskell, Christie Rose Marie
author_sort Haskell, Christie Rose Marie
title Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
title_short Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
title_full Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
title_fullStr Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
title_full_unstemmed Barking at Emotionally-Laden Words: The Role of Attention
title_sort barking at emotionally-laden words: the role of attention
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7515
work_keys_str_mv AT haskellchristierosemarie barkingatemotionallyladenwordstheroleofattention
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