4.5 Article

Threat Reduces Value-Driven but Not Salience-Driven Attentional Capture

Journal

EMOTION
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 874-889

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/emo0000599

Keywords

selective attention; attentional capture; reward learning; threat; anxiety

Funding

  1. Texas AM University
  2. Brain & Behavior Research Foundation [NARSAD 26008]
  3. NIH [R01-DA046410]

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What we direct our attention to is strongly influenced by both bottom-up and top-down processes. Moreover, the control of attention is biased by prior learning, such that attention is automatically captured by stimuli previously associated with either reward or threat. It is unknown whether value-oriented and threat-oriented mechanisms of selective information processing function independently of one another, or whether they interact with each other in the selection process. Here, we introduced the threat of electric shock into the value-driven attentional capture paradigm to examine whether the experience of threat influences the attention capturing quality of previously reward-associated stimuli. The results showed that value-driven attentional capture was blunted by the experience of threat. This contrasts with previous reports of threat potentiating attentional capture by physically salient stimuli, which we replicate here. Our findings demonstrate that threat selectively interferes with value-based but not salience-based attentional priority, consistent with a competitive relationship between value-based and threat-based information processing.

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