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Rapid communications

Rapid communication: Global–local processing affects recognition of distractor emotional faces

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Pages 425-433 | Received 08 Aug 2010, Published online: 23 Feb 2011
 

Abstract

Recent studies have shown links between happy faces and global, distributed attention as well as sad faces to local, focused attention. Emotions have been shown to affect global–local processing. Given that studies on emotion–cognition interactions have not explored the effect of perceptual processing at different spatial scales on processing stimuli with emotional content, the present study investigated the link between perceptual focus and emotional processing. The study investigated the effects of global–local processing on the recognition of distractor faces with emotional expressions. Participants performed a digit discrimination task with digits at either the global level or the local level presented against a distractor face (happy or sad) as background. The results showed that global processing associated with broad scope of attention facilitates recognition of happy faces, and local processing associated with narrow scope of attention facilitates recognition of sad faces. The novel results of the study provide conclusive evidence for emotion–cognition interactions by demonstrating the effect of perceptual processing on emotional faces. The results along with earlier complementary results on the effect of emotion on global–local processing support a reciprocal relationship between emotional processing and global–local processing. Distractor processing with emotional information also has implications for theories of selective attention.

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