Allritz Matthias, Call Josep, Borkenau Peter
Department for Differential Psychology and Psychological Assessment, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, Halle (Saale), Germany.
Department of Developmental and Comparative Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany.
Anim Cogn. 2016 May;19(3):435-49. doi: 10.1007/s10071-015-0944-3. Epub 2015 Nov 27.
The emotional Stroop task is an experimental paradigm developed to study the relationship between emotion and cognition. Human participants required to identify the color of words typically respond more slowly to negative than to neutral words (emotional Stroop effect). Here we investigated whether chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) would show a comparable effect. Using a touch screen, eight chimpanzees were trained to choose between two simultaneously presented stimuli based on color (two identical images with differently colored frames). In Experiment 1, the images within the color frames were shapes that were either of the same color as the surrounding frame or of the alternative color. Subjects made fewer errors and responded faster when shapes were of the same color as the frame surrounding them than when they were not, evidencing that embedded images affected target selection. Experiment 2, a modified version of the emotional Stroop task, presented subjects with four different categories of novel images: three categories of pictures of humans (veterinarian, caretaker, and stranger), and control stimuli showing a white square. Because visits by the veterinarian that include anaesthetization can be stressful for subjects, we expected impaired performance in trials presenting images of the veterinarian. For the first session, we found correct responses to be indeed slower in trials of this category. This effect was more pronounced for subjects whose last anaesthetization experience was more recent, indicating that emotional valence caused the slowdown. We propose our modified emotional Stroop task as a simple method to explore which emotional stimuli affect cognitive performance in nonhuman primates.
情绪斯特鲁普任务是一种为研究情绪与认知之间的关系而开发的实验范式。要求人类参与者识别单词颜色时,通常对消极词汇的反应比对中性词汇的反应更慢(情绪斯特鲁普效应)。在此,我们研究了黑猩猩(Pan troglodytes)是否会表现出类似的效应。利用触摸屏,八只黑猩猩接受训练,根据颜色在两个同时呈现的刺激物之间进行选择(两个带有不同颜色边框的相同图像)。在实验1中,颜色边框内的图像是形状,这些形状要么与周围边框颜色相同,要么是另一种颜色。当形状与围绕它们的边框颜色相同时,受试者犯的错误更少,反应也更快,这证明嵌入的图像会影响目标选择。实验2是情绪斯特鲁普任务的一个修改版本,向受试者呈现四类不同的新颖图像:三类人类图片(兽医、护理人员和陌生人),以及显示白色方块的对照刺激物。由于包括麻醉在内的兽医探访可能会给受试者带来压力,我们预计在呈现兽医图像的试验中表现会受损。在第一阶段,我们发现这类试验中的正确反应确实较慢。对于最后一次麻醉经历更近的受试者,这种效应更为明显,表明情绪效价导致了反应变慢。我们提出我们修改后的情绪斯特鲁普任务作为一种简单的方法,来探索哪些情绪刺激会影响非人类灵长类动物的认知表现。