Publication | Closed Access
Affective modulation of recognition bias.
76
Citations
53
References
2005
Year
Affective VariableAffective NeuroscienceCognitionLiberal Recognition BiasAttentionPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseEarliest Processing StagesAffective ComputingNegative AffectCognitive ScienceRecognition BiasExperimental PsychologyEmotion RecognitionSocial CognitionImplicit MemoryEmotionAdaptive Emotion
A correspondence of processing on the familiarity-novelty and positive-negative dimensions, particularly in the earliest processing stages, is proposed. Familiarity manipulations should, therefore, not only influence affective evaluations (e.g., the mere exposure effect), but affective manipulations should also bias familiarity judgments (e.g., in recognition). In Experiment 1, both previously presented and new recognition test words were primed by matching, nonmatching, positive, or negative context words. In Experiment 2, more diffuse affective states were induced during recognition test trials by contracting facial muscles that corresponded to positive and negative expressions. Particularly when participants were less aware of the familiarity and affective manipulations, corresponding effects were found. Positive affect led to a more liberal recognition bias, and negative affect led to more cautious tendencies.
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