negative arousal
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Emotion ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weizhen Xie ◽  
JC Lynne Lu Sing ◽  
Ana Martinez-Flores ◽  
Weiwei Zhang

Author(s):  
Andy Jeesu Kim ◽  
Hananeh Alambeigi ◽  
Tara Goddard ◽  
Anthony D. McDonald ◽  
Brian A. Anderson

AbstractWhile attention has consistently been shown to be biased toward threatening objects in experimental settings, our understanding of how attention is modulated when the observer is in an anxious or aroused state and how this ultimately affects behavior is limited. In real-world environments, automobile drivers can sometimes carry negative perceptions toward bicyclists that share the road. It is unclear whether bicyclist encounters on a roadway lead to physiological changes and attentional biases that ultimately influence driving behavior. Here, we examined whether participants in a high-fidelity driving simulator exhibited an arousal response in the presence of a bicyclist and how this modulated eye movements and driving behavior. We hypothesized that bicyclists would evoke a robust arousal and orienting response, the strength of which would be associated with safer driving behavior. The results revealed that encountering a bicyclist evoked negative arousal by both self-report and physiological measures. Physiological and eye-tracking measures were themselves unrelated, however, being independently associated with safer driving behavior. Our findings offer a real-world demonstration of how arousal and attentional prioritization can lead to adaptive behavior.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Clewett ◽  
Lila Davachi

Time unfolds continuously, yet our memories are stored as discrete episodes. Prior work shows that fluctuations between stability and change in an ongoing neutral context facilitates this formation of distinct and memorable events. However, less is known about how shifting emotional states influence these memory processes, despite ample evidence that emotion has a robust influence on non-temporal aspects of episodic memory. Here, we examined if emotional stimuli influence temporal memory for recent event sequences. Participants encoded lists of neutral object images while listening to pure auditory tones. At regular intervals within each list, participants heard emotional positive, negative, or neutral sounds, which served as ‘emotional event boundaries’ that divided each sequence into discrete auditory events. Temporal order memory was tested for neutral item pairs that either spanned an emotional sound (‘boundary-spanning’) or encountered within the same auditory event (‘same-context’). We found that highly arousing boundaries had opposite effects on binding ongoing versus subsequent sequential representations in memory. Specifically, highly arousing emotional sounds tended to lead to worse temporal order memory for boundary-spanning item pairs. By contrast, they led to better temporal order memory for same-context item pairs in the next event. Both of these arousal effects were specific to negative sounds. The carryover effect of negative arousal was also strongest for item pairs encountered closest to the boundary and diminished as the event unfolded. These findings suggest that temporally dynamic emotional states support the temporal integration of mnemonic events, which may contribute to the hyper-episodic nature of negative emotional memories.


Author(s):  
Andy J. Kim ◽  
Brian A. Anderson

Abstract. Studies on attentional bias have overwhelmingly focused on the priority of different stimuli and have rarely manipulated the state of the observer. Recently, the threat of unpredictable shock has been utilized to experimentally induce anxiety and investigate how negative arousal modulates attentional control. Experimentally induced anxiety has been shown to reduce the attentional priority afforded to reward-related stimuli while enhancing the efficiency of goal-directed attentional control. It is unclear which of these two influences might dominate when attending to reward-related stimuli is consistent with task goals and by extension what the scope of the modulatory influence of threat on attention is. In contrast to paradigms in the visual domain, a novel auditory identification task has demonstrated a robust influence of target-value associations on selective attention. In the present study, we examined how the threat of shock modulates the influence of learned value on voluntary attention. In both threat and no-threat conditions, we replicate prior findings of voluntary prioritization of reward-associated sounds. However, unlike in studies measuring involuntary attentional capture, threat did not modulate the influence of reward on attention. Our findings highlight important limitations to when and how threat modulates the control of attention, contextualizing prior findings.


F1000Research ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 325
Author(s):  
Mimi Borrelli ◽  
vikram sinha ◽  
Sophie Scott

Laughter is contagious, sensitive to social context, and can be used to mitigate negative emotional states. This experiment tested whether moments of transition from negative to positive affect were associated with more laughter if in familiar compared to unfamiliar company. 90 participants (47 females, mean age 20.61 years), either familiar (N=42) or unfamiliar (N=48) to the principle researcher, were randomly assigned to listen to 44 seconds of music which induced a fearful affect, positive affect or a neutral mood, followed by 30 seconds of infectious laughter (N=30/group). Filmed facial expressions were coded for four dependent variables (duration: half smile; full smile; laugh, and extent: peak mirth) of amusement in response to the laughter. Familiar participants fully smiled for longer than unfamiliar participants (F(1,84)=4.15, p=.045). There was an affect-familiarity interaction for peak mirth (F(2,84)=4.68, p=.01), time spent half smiling F(2,84)=5.00, p=.009), and fully smiling (F(2,84)=3.48, p=.035). Post hoc analyses revealed familiar participants exhibited greater peak mirth and smiled (half and full) for longer than unfamiliar participants in the fearful affect condition.  Laughter and positive emotions may be used to moderate negative arousal more amongst people known to each other than amongst strangers.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weizhen Xie ◽  
JC Lynne Lu Sing ◽  
Ana Martinez-Flores ◽  
Weiwei Zhang

This study examines how induced negative arousal influences the consolidation of fragile sensory inputs into durable working memory (WM) representations. Participants performed a visual WM change detection task with different amounts of encoding time manipulated by random pattern masks inserted at different levels of memory-and-mask Stimulus-Onset-Asynchrony (SOA). Prior to the WM task, negative or neutral emotion was induced using audio clips from the International Affective Digital Sounds (IADS). Pupillometry was simultaneously recorded to provide an objective measure of induced arousal. Self-report measures of early-life stress (i.e., adverse childhood experiences) and current mood states (i.e., depressed mood and anxious feeling) were also collected as covariates. We find that participants encode more items into WM at a longer memory-and-mask SOA under induced negative arousal, while their performance at a shorter memory-and-mask SOA or no mask conditions is highly comparable between negative and neutral conditions. These findings suggest that induced negative arousal can speed up WM consolidation. Furthermore, this emotional effect on WM consolidation speed is moderated by key affect-related individual differences. Participants who have greater pupil responses to negative IADS sounds or have more early-life stress show faster WM consolidation under induced negative arousal. Collectively, our findings reveal a critical role of phasic adrenergic responses in the rapid consolidation of visual WM content and the potential moderators of this association.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
András Marx ◽  
Rita Lenkei ◽  
Paula Pérez Fraga ◽  
Viktória Bakos ◽  
Enikő Kubinyi ◽  
...  

AbstractDuring social interactions, acoustic parameters of tetrapods’ vocalisations reflect the emotional state of the caller. Higher levels of spectral noise and the occurrence of irregularities (non-linear phenomena NLP) might be negative arousal indicators in alarm calls, although less is known about other distress vocalisations. Family dogs experience different levels of stress during separation from their owner and may vocalise extensively. Analysing their whines can provide evidence for the relationship between arousal and NLP. We recorded 167 family dogs’ separation behaviour including vocalisations, assessed their stress level based on behaviour and tested how these, their individual features, and owner reported separation-related problems (SRP) relate to their whines’ (N = 4086) spectral noise and NLP. Dogs with SRP produced NLP whines more likely. More active dogs and dogs that tried to escape produced noisier whines. Older dogs’ whines were more harmonic than younger ones’, but they also showed a higher NLP ratio. Our results show that vocal harshness and NLP are associated with arousal in contact calls, and thus might function as stress indicators. The higher occurrence of NLP in older dogs irrespective to separation stress suggests loss in precise neural control of the larynx, and hence can be a potential ageing indicator.


2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 22-29
Author(s):  
Nihan TOMRİS KÜÇÜN ◽  
Sezen GÜNGÖR

The tendency of an individual to share his beings with other people arises from the social aspect of human nature. Especially in today's conditions where the gap between advantageous and disadvantaged groups is getting deeper, donation is extremely important to reach a global level of welfare and to create fair living standards for all. Due to the stated priorities, donation behavior has an important place among both religious and moral values. However, the factors that lead an individual towards donation behavior are not only social rules. In addition to external factors, important internal factors such as emotions also play a big role in the donation decision. In addition, there are many variables such as the donated thing itself, total assets of the donor and indeed the characteristics of the donor. Donation behavior, which is widely examined in the literature, is also considered as an important decision making subject. In our study, the effects that motivate an individual towards a donation; along with the donation amount and the ratio of donation, were examined with framing heuristics which express the individual's knowledge of the victim. The mentioned variables were associated with stress as one of the strongest negative arousal output, to understand the emotional aspect of a donation decision. The stress levels of the participants, who manipulated by two different scenarios, were monitored with galvanic skin response to determine the decision-making scenarios which triggered stress. As a result; it has been found that the individual's effort to gain the money he donates and the features of the donation call significantly affect the decision.


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