Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention

Abstract Introduction Emotion has been shown to influence selective visual attention. However, studies in this field have revealed contradictory findings regarding the nature of this influence. One possible explanation for the variation in findings is that affective inter‐individual differences impa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robert C. A. Bendall, Shaunine Begley, Catherine Thompson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-11-01
Series:Brain and Behavior
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2387
_version_ 1818736605385457664
author Robert C. A. Bendall
Shaunine Begley
Catherine Thompson
author_facet Robert C. A. Bendall
Shaunine Begley
Catherine Thompson
author_sort Robert C. A. Bendall
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Introduction Emotion has been shown to influence selective visual attention. However, studies in this field have revealed contradictory findings regarding the nature of this influence. One possible explanation for the variation in findings is that affective inter‐individual differences impact both attention and emotion and may therefore moderate any influence of emotion on attention. The current work is a novel investigation of the effects of induced emotional states and the traits of extraversion and neuroticism on visual attention. This allowed a direct investigation of any impact of extraversion and neuroticism on the way in which emotion influences attention. Methods Participants were induced into positive, neutral, and negative emotional states before completing a change detection flicker task in which they were required to locate a change to a real‐world scene as quickly and accurately as possible. Results Participants scoring higher in extraversion were more accurate but slower at detecting changes. Importantly, this was particularly evident when induced into a negative emotional state compared to a neutral emotional state. Neuroticism had no impact on attention. Conclusions The current study provides evidence that extraversion can moderate the influence of negative emotion upon visual attention and may help to explain some of the contradictory findings in this research area. When considered independently, increased trait levels of extraversion were associated with improved change detection. Individuals higher in extraversion appear better equipped to regulate negative emotion compared to individuals lower in extraversion, supporting research linking extraversion to affective reactivity and models of psychopathology.
first_indexed 2024-12-18T00:39:48Z
format Article
id doaj.art-0657693c6bc7409c8fc17cdbc89a5f18
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2162-3279
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-18T00:39:48Z
publishDate 2021-11-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Brain and Behavior
spelling doaj.art-0657693c6bc7409c8fc17cdbc89a5f182022-12-21T21:26:56ZengWileyBrain and Behavior2162-32792021-11-011111n/an/a10.1002/brb3.2387Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attentionRobert C. A. Bendall0Shaunine Begley1Catherine Thompson2Directorate of Psychology & Sport School of Health and Society University of Salford Salford UKDirectorate of Psychology & Sport School of Health and Society University of Salford Salford UKDirectorate of Psychology & Sport School of Health and Society University of Salford Salford UKAbstract Introduction Emotion has been shown to influence selective visual attention. However, studies in this field have revealed contradictory findings regarding the nature of this influence. One possible explanation for the variation in findings is that affective inter‐individual differences impact both attention and emotion and may therefore moderate any influence of emotion on attention. The current work is a novel investigation of the effects of induced emotional states and the traits of extraversion and neuroticism on visual attention. This allowed a direct investigation of any impact of extraversion and neuroticism on the way in which emotion influences attention. Methods Participants were induced into positive, neutral, and negative emotional states before completing a change detection flicker task in which they were required to locate a change to a real‐world scene as quickly and accurately as possible. Results Participants scoring higher in extraversion were more accurate but slower at detecting changes. Importantly, this was particularly evident when induced into a negative emotional state compared to a neutral emotional state. Neuroticism had no impact on attention. Conclusions The current study provides evidence that extraversion can moderate the influence of negative emotion upon visual attention and may help to explain some of the contradictory findings in this research area. When considered independently, increased trait levels of extraversion were associated with improved change detection. Individuals higher in extraversion appear better equipped to regulate negative emotion compared to individuals lower in extraversion, supporting research linking extraversion to affective reactivity and models of psychopathology.https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2387change detectionemotionextraversionvisual attentionvisual search
spellingShingle Robert C. A. Bendall
Shaunine Begley
Catherine Thompson
Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
Brain and Behavior
change detection
emotion
extraversion
visual attention
visual search
title Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
title_full Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
title_fullStr Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
title_full_unstemmed Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
title_short Interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
title_sort interactive influences of emotion and extraversion on visual attention
topic change detection
emotion
extraversion
visual attention
visual search
url https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2387
work_keys_str_mv AT robertcabendall interactiveinfluencesofemotionandextraversiononvisualattention
AT shauninebegley interactiveinfluencesofemotionandextraversiononvisualattention
AT catherinethompson interactiveinfluencesofemotionandextraversiononvisualattention