Aging and Attentional Biases for Emotional Faces
University of California, Santa Cruz · Stanford University
Abstract
We examined age differences in attention to and memory for faces expressing sadness, anger, and happiness. Participants saw a pair of faces, one emotional and one neutral, and then a dot probe that appeared in the location of one of the faces. In two experiments, older adults responded faster to the dot if it was presented on the same side as a neutral face than if it was presented on the same side as a negative face. Younger adults did not exhibit this attentional bias. Interactions of age and valence were also found for memory for the faces, with older adults remembering positive better than negative faces. These findings reveal that in their initial attention, older adults avoid negative information. This…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Sadness
- Happiness
- Anger
- Emotional valence
- Attentional bias
- Negative information
- Valence (chemistry)