Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2010 Oct;99(4):595-610. doi: 10.1037/a0020665.
Five experiments examine whether the ability of emotions to influence judgments of threat extends to a very basic process inherent in threat detection: object recognition. Participants experiencing different emotions were asked to make rapid judgments about whether target individuals were holding guns or neutral objects. Results across 4 experiments supported the hypothesis that anger increases the probability that neutral objects will be misidentified as ones related to violence, but not the converse. Of import, the findings demonstrate that this bias is not a simple function of the negative valence of an emotional state, but stems from specific threat-relevant cues provided by anger. Direct manipulation of participants' expectancies for encountering guns in the environment is shown not only to remove the bias among angry individuals when set to be low but also to produce a corresponding bias among neutral participants when set to be high. A 5th study demonstrates that the bias is amenable to correction given sufficient ability.
物体识别。让经历不同情绪的参与者快速判断目标个体是否持有枪支或中性物体。四项实验的结果支持了这样一种假设,即愤怒增加了将中性物体错误识别为与暴力相关的物体的可能性,但反之则不然。重要的是,这些发现表明这种偏见不是情绪状态负性的简单函数,而是源于愤怒提供的特定与威胁相关的线索。不仅表明通过直接操纵参与者对环境中枪支的预期,当愤怒个体的预期被设定为低时,这种偏见会消除,而且当中性参与者的预期被设定为高时,也会产生相应的偏见。第五项研究表明,只要有足够的能力,这种偏见是可以纠正的。