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American Psychological Association, Emotion, 1(8), p. 68-80

DOI: 10.1037/1528-3542.8.1.68

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Emotional Scenes in Peripheral Vision: Selective Orienting and Gist Processing, But Not Content Identification

Journal article published in 2008 by Manuel G. Calvo, Lauri Nummenmaa ORCID, Jukka Hyönä ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Emotional-neutral pairs of visual scenes were presented peripherally (with their inner edges 5.2 degrees away from fixation) as primes for 150 to 900 ms, followed by a centrally presented recognition probe scene, which was either identical in specific content to one of the primes or related in general content and affective valence. Results indicated that (a) if no foveal fixations on the primes were allowed, the false alarm rate for emotional probes was increased; (b) hit rate and sensitivity (A') were higher for emotional than for neutral probes only when a fixation was possible on only one prime; and (c) emotional scenes were more likely to attract the first fixation than neutral scenes. It is concluded that the specific content of emotional or neutral scenes is not processed in peripheral vision. Nevertheless, a coarse impression of emotional scenes may be extracted, which then leads to selective attentional orienting or--in the absence of overt attention--causes false alarms for related probes.