Abstract
We used threatening, friendly, and neutral schematic facial stimuli, in which three, two, or one feature(s) conveyed emotion, to test the hypothesis that humans preferentially orient attention towards threat, and to examine the relation between facial features, emotional impression, and visual attention. Using a visual search paradigm, participants searched for discrepant faces in arrays of otherwise identical faces. Subsequently they also rated their emotional impression of the involved stimuli. Across four experiments, we found faster and more accurate detection of threatening than friendly faces, even when only one feature conveyed the emotion. Facial features affected both attention and emotion in the rank order eyebrows > mouth > eyes. Finally, the emotional impression of a face predicted its effect on attention.

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