Watch out, he´s dangerous! Electrocortical indicators of selective visual attention to allegedly threatening persons
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteDate
2020Referencia bibliográfica
Published version: Bublatzky, F., Guerra, P., & Alpers, G. W. (2020). Watch out, he´s dangerous! Electrocortical indicators of selective visual attention to allegedly threatening persons. Cortex, 131, 164-178. doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2020.07.009
Résumé
The face of a friend indicates safety, the face of a foe can indicate threat. Here, we examine the
effects of verbal instructions (‘beware of this person’) on the perception of unknown persons.
Focusing on visual attention, face identity and facial expression information is examined during
instructed threat-of-shock or safety. However, shocks never occurred. Participants quickly
acquired instructed threat associations, and electrocortical processing differentiated threatfrom
safe-identities as well as emotional and neutral facial expressions. Importantly, face
encoding varied as a joint function of identity and facial expression, as revealed by pronounced
N170 amplitudes to smiling threat-identities. Moreover, instructions readily reversed
previously learned affective associations leading to attention allocation and memory updating
as reflected by N170, EPN and P3 amplitudes toward new threat-identities displaying angry
expressions. These findings demonstrate that person perception flexibly re-adjusts according to
minimal information. Intriguingly, perceptual biases occur even though the anticipated aversive
consequence does not occur, with implications for research on stereotyping and anxious
psychopathology.