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The Influence of a Working Memory Task on Affective Perception of Facial Expressions
Authors:Seung-Lark Lim  Amanda S. Bruce  Robin L. Aupperle
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of Missouri Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, United States of America.; 2. Department of Pediatrics, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas, United States of America.; 3. Center for Children''s Healthy Lifestyle and Nutrition, Children''s Mercy Hospital, Kansas City, Missouri, United States of America.; The University of New South Wales, Australia,
Abstract:In a dual-task paradigm, participants performed a spatial location working memory task and a forced two-choice perceptual decision task (neutral vs. fearful) with gradually morphed emotional faces (neutral ∼ fearful). Task-irrelevant word distractors (negative, neutral, and control) were experimentally manipulated during spatial working memory encoding. We hypothesized that, if affective perception is influenced by concurrent cognitive load using a working memory task, task-irrelevant emotional distractors would bias subsequent perceptual decision-making on ambiguous facial expression. We found that when either neutral or negative emotional words were presented as task-irrelevant working-memory distractors, participants more frequently reported fearful face perception - but only at the higher emotional intensity levels of morphed faces. Also, the affective perception bias due to negative emotional distractors correlated with a decrease in working memory performance. Taken together, our findings suggest that concurrent working memory load by task-irrelevant distractors has an impact on affective perception of facial expressions.
Keywords:
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