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- Emotional modulation of attention - Nature Reviews Psychology
A 2001 paper by Öhman, Flykt and Esteves delves into this intricate relationship between emotion and cognition and explores the profound impact of emotion on attention allocation,
- Emotion and attention interaction: a trade-off between . . .
In summary, we suggest that the relationship between emotion and attention is flexible rather than rigid and depends on several factors Considering this perspective may help us to understand the divergence in the results described by several studies in this field
- Emotion and attention | Philosophical Studies - Springer
Everyday experience, along with empirical research, suggests that emotion and attention are closely linked Outside of experimental settings, in the ‘natural environment’, much of what captures our attention does so due to its emotional significance 1 Consider the following example
- The interface between emotion and attention: a review of . . .
This review addresses the interconnections between emotional and attentional processing, with an emphasis on both behavioral and neuroscientific findings Are emotional stimuli encoded automatically, and what does that mean?
- The interaction of attention and emotion - ScienceDirect
In this paper we have investigated the interaction of emotion and attention through a careful review of the psychological and neuroimaging literature as well as through explicit modelling of various attention emotion paradigms by means of a model developed by extending the CODAM model for attention to include limbic and paralimbic structures
- (PDF) The effects of emotion on attention: A review of . . .
The relationship between population trait vulnerabilities and study sampling and selection in attention to emotional information
- Emotion and attention interaction: a trade-off between . . .
This study found that both emotional stimuli were able to capture attention within a similar time course, resulting in the conclusion that biologically relevant stimuli, whether fear- or nurture-relevant, have access to preferential processing (see also Brosch et al , 2007) Furthermore, recent studies using highly relevant emotional stimuli in
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