Probing picture perception: Activation and emotion
- 1 March 1996
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Psychophysiology
- Vol. 33 (2) , 103-111
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-8986.1996.tb02114.x
Abstract
When acoustic startle probes are presented during picture viewing, the blink reflex is augmented for unpleasant foreground stimuli and reduced during pleasant stimuli. The present experiment assessed the hypothesis that this affect-startle effect increases as pictures are judged to be more arousing. Eyeblinks elicited by startle probes of three different intensities were recorded while subjects viewed pictures varying in both pleasure (pleasant, neutral, and unpleasant) and arousal (low, moderate, and high). Both blink potentiation during unpleasant content and blink diminution during pleasant content were clearly strongest for picture contents high in arousal. The effect was present for all probe intensities tested.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lateralized startle probes in the study of emotionPsychophysiology, 1996
- Looking at pictures: Affective, facial, visceral, and behavioral reactionsPsychophysiology, 1993
- Emotion in the criminal psychopath: Startle reflex modulation.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1993
- Emotion, attention, and the startle reflex.Psychological Review, 1990
- Cognitive-Emotional Interactions in the BrainCognition and Emotion, 1989
- The Continuing Problem of False Positives in Repeated Measures ANOVA in Psychophysiology: A Multivariate SolutionPsychophysiology, 1987
- Affect and memory: A review.Psychological Bulletin, 1986
- Pharmacological and anatomical analysis of fear conditioning using the fear-potentiated startle paradigm.Behavioral Neuroscience, 1986
- Individual Differences in Autonomic Response: Conditioned Association or Conditioned Fear?Psychophysiology, 1985
- Heart-rate change as a component of the orienting response.Psychological Bulletin, 1966