TY - JOUR
T1 - Nonconscious Emotional Activation Colors First Impressions
T2 - A Regulatory Role for Conscious Awareness
AU - Lapate, Regina C.
AU - Rokers, Bas
AU - Li, Tianyi
AU - Davidson, Richard J.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by National Institute of Mental Health Grants R01-MH43454 and P50-MH069315 (R. J. Davidson) and by the James L. Davis Fellowship for Affective Neuroscience (R. C. Lapate).
PY - 2014/2
Y1 - 2014/2
N2 - Emotions can color people's attitudes toward unrelated objects in the environment. Existing evidence suggests that such emotional coloring is particularly strong when emotion-triggering information escapes conscious awareness. But is emotional reactivity stronger after nonconscious emotional provocation than after conscious emotional provocation, or does conscious processing specifically change the association between emotional reactivity and evaluations of unrelated objects? In this study, we independently indexed emotional reactivity and coloring as a function of emotional-stimulus awareness to disentangle these accounts. Specifically, we recorded skin-conductance responses to spiders and fearful faces, along with subsequent preferences for novel neutral faces during visually aware and unaware states. Fearful faces increased skin-conductance responses comparably in both stimulus-aware and stimulus-unaware conditions. Yet only when visual awareness was precluded did skin-conductance responses to fearful faces predict decreased likability of neutral faces. These findings suggest a regulatory role for conscious awareness in breaking otherwise automatic associations between physiological reactivity and evaluative emotional responses.
AB - Emotions can color people's attitudes toward unrelated objects in the environment. Existing evidence suggests that such emotional coloring is particularly strong when emotion-triggering information escapes conscious awareness. But is emotional reactivity stronger after nonconscious emotional provocation than after conscious emotional provocation, or does conscious processing specifically change the association between emotional reactivity and evaluations of unrelated objects? In this study, we independently indexed emotional reactivity and coloring as a function of emotional-stimulus awareness to disentangle these accounts. Specifically, we recorded skin-conductance responses to spiders and fearful faces, along with subsequent preferences for novel neutral faces during visually aware and unaware states. Fearful faces increased skin-conductance responses comparably in both stimulus-aware and stimulus-unaware conditions. Yet only when visual awareness was precluded did skin-conductance responses to fearful faces predict decreased likability of neutral faces. These findings suggest a regulatory role for conscious awareness in breaking otherwise automatic associations between physiological reactivity and evaluative emotional responses.
KW - consciousness
KW - emotions
KW - individual differences
KW - subliminal perception
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U2 - 10.1177/0956797613503175
DO - 10.1177/0956797613503175
M3 - Article
C2 - 24317420
AN - SCOPUS:84893597391
SN - 0956-7976
VL - 25
SP - 349
EP - 357
JO - Psychological Science
JF - Psychological Science
IS - 2
ER -