University of Illinois Chicago
Browse

The Impact of Emotional Faces on Younger and Older Adults’ Attentional Blink

Download (566.16 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2019-06-01, 00:00 authored by Allison M. Sklenar, Andrew Mienaltowski
The attentional blink (AB) is the impaired ability to detect a second target (T2) when it follows shortly after the first (T1) among distractors in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP). Given questions about the automaticity of age differences in emotion processing, the current study examined whether emotion cues differentially impact the AB elicited in older and younger adults. Twenty-two younger (18-22 years) and 22 older adult participants (62-78 years) reported on the emotional content of target face stimulus pairs embedded in a RSVP of scrambled-face distractor images. Target pairs included photo-realistic faces of angry, happy, and neutral expressions. The order of emotional and neutral stimuli as T1 or T2 and the degree of temporal separation within the RSVP systematically varied. Target detection accuracy was used to operationalize the AB. Although older adults displayed a larger AB than younger adults, no age differences emerged in the impact of emotion on the AB. Angry T1 faces increased the AB of both age groups. Neither emotional T2 attenuated the AB. Negative facial expressions held the attention of younger and older adults in a comparable manner, exacerbating the AB and supporting a negativity bias instead of a positivity effect in older adults.

Funding

This work was supported by a grant awarded to A. M. S. by the Graduate School at Western Kentucky University [221467]. Data were collected in conjunction with the first author’s master’s thesis, and were presented in part as a poster at the annual meeting of the Association for Psychological Science in 2016.

History

Publisher Statement

Post print version of article may differ from published version. This is an electronic version of an article published in Sklenar, A. M., & Mienaltowski, A. (2019). The impact of emotional faces on younger and older adults’ attentional blink. Cognition and Emotion is available online at: http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/ DOI: 10.1080/02699931.2019.1573719.

Citation

Sklenar, A. M., & Mienaltowski, A. (2019). The impact of emotional faces on younger and older adults’ attentional blink. Cognition and Emotion. doi:10.1080/02699931.2019.1573719

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Language

  • en_US

issn

0269-9931

Issue date

2019-02-03

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC