Journal
PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN
Volume 43, Issue 11, Pages 1519-1529Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0146167217722558
Keywords
evaluative processing; threat; social cognition; negativity
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Given the evolutionary significance of survival, the mind might be particularly sensitive (in terms of strength and speed of reaction) to stimuli that pose an immediate threat to physical harm. To rectify limitations in past research, we pilot-tested stimuli to obtain images that are threatening, nonthreatening-negative, positive, or neutral. Three studies revealed that participants (a) were faster to detect a threatening than nonthreatening-negative image when each was embedded among positive or neutral images, (b) oriented their initial gaze more frequently toward threatening than nonthreatening-negative, positive, or neutral images, and (c) evidenced larger startle-eyeblinks to threatening than to nonthreatening-negative, positive, or neutral images. Social-psychological implications for the mind's sensitivity to threat are discussed.
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