4.5 Article

A Tale of Two Negatives: Differential Memory Modulation by Threat-Related Facial Expressions

Journal

EMOTION
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 647-655

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/a0021625

Keywords

facial expressions; memory; attention; emotion

Funding

  1. NIMH NIH HHS [MH080716, R01 MH080716, MH069315, P50 MH069315, K99 MH087813] Funding Source: Medline

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Facial expressions serve as cues that encourage viewers to learn about their immediate environment. In studies assessing the influence of emotional cues on behavior, fearful and angry faces are often combined into one category, such as threat-related, because they share similar emotional valence and arousal properties. However, these expressions convey different information to the viewer. Fearful faces indicate the increased probability of a threat, whereas angry expressions embody a certain and direct threat. This conceptualization predicts that a fearful face should facilitate processing of the environment to gather information to disambiguate the threat. Here, we tested whether fearful faces facilitated processing of neutral information presented in close temporal proximity to the faces. In Experiment 1, we demonstrated that, compared with neutral faces, fearful faces enhanced memory for neutral words presented in the experimental context, whereas angry faces did not. In Experiment 2, we directly compared the effects of fearful and angry faces on subsequent memory for emotional faces versus neutral words. We replicated the findings of Experiment 1 and extended them by showing that participants remembered more faces from the angry face condition relative to the fear condition, consistent with the notion that anger differs from fear in that it directs attention toward the angry individual. Because these effects cannot be attributed to differences in arousal or valence processing, we suggest they are best understood in terms of differences in the predictive information conveyed by fearful and angry facial expressions.

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