
doi: 10.1037/a0028415
pmid: 22642346
Previous dot-probe studies indicate that threat-related face cues induce a bias in spatial attention. Independently of spatial attention, a recent psychophysical study suggests that a bilateral fearful face cue improves low spatial-frequency perception (LSF) and impairs high spatial-frequency perception (HSF). Here, we combine these separate lines of research within a single dot-probe paradigm. We found that a bilateral fearful face cue, compared with a bilateral neutral face cue, speeded up responses to LSF targets and slowed down responses to HSF targets. This finding is important, as it shows that emotional cues in dot-probe tasks not only bias where information is preferentially processed (i.e., an attentional bias in spatial location), but also bias what type of information is preferentially processed (i.e., a perceptual bias in spatial frequency).
Emotion, Adult, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Attentional bias, Emotions, ESSB PSY, Fear, Anxiety, Neuropsychological Tests, Facial Expression, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Social Perception, Space Perception, Spatial frequency, Humans, Attention, Female, Cues, Perceptual bias
Emotion, Adult, Male, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Attentional bias, Emotions, ESSB PSY, Fear, Anxiety, Neuropsychological Tests, Facial Expression, Young Adult, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Social Perception, Space Perception, Spatial frequency, Humans, Attention, Female, Cues, Perceptual bias
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