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冻结还是逃跑?负面刺激引发选择性反应。

Freeze or flee? Negative stimuli elicit selective responding.

作者信息

Estes Zachary, Verges Michelle

机构信息

Department of Psychology, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.

出版信息

Cognition. 2008 Aug;108(2):557-65. doi: 10.1016/j.cognition.2008.03.003. Epub 2008 Apr 22.

Abstract

Humans preferentially attend to negative stimuli. A consequence of this automatic vigilance for negative valence is that negative words elicit slower responses than neutral or positive words on a host of cognitive tasks. Some researchers have speculated that negative stimuli elicit a general suppression of motor activity, akin to the freezing response exhibited by animals under threat. Alternatively, we suggest that negative stimuli only elicit slowed responding on tasks for which stimulus valence is irrelevant for responding. To discriminate between these motor suppression and response-relevance hypotheses, we elicited both lexical decisions and valence judgments of negative words and positive words. Relative to positive words (e.g., kitten), negative words (e.g., spider) elicited slower lexical decisions but faster valence judgments. Results therefore indicate that negative stimuli do not cause a generalized motor suppression. Rather, negative stimuli elicit selective responding, with faster responses on tasks for which stimulus valence is response-relevant.

摘要

人类优先关注负面刺激。这种对负性效价的自动警觉的一个结果是,在许多认知任务中,负面词汇比中性或正面词汇引发的反应更慢。一些研究人员推测,负面刺激会引发对运动活动的普遍抑制,类似于动物在受到威胁时表现出的冻结反应。或者,我们认为负面刺激只会在刺激效价与反应无关的任务上引发反应变慢。为了区分这些运动抑制和反应相关性假设,我们对负面词汇和正面词汇进行了词汇判断和效价判断。相对于正面词汇(如小猫),负面词汇(如蜘蛛)引发的词汇判断更慢,但效价判断更快。因此,结果表明负面刺激不会导致普遍的运动抑制。相反,负面刺激会引发选择性反应,在刺激效价与反应相关的任务上反应更快。

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