Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects

Facial cues of threat such as anger and other race membership are detected preferentially in visual search tasks. However, it remains unclear whether these facial cues interact in visual search. If both cues equally facilitate search, a symmetrical interaction would be predicted; anger cues should f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lipp, Ottmar, Craig, B., Frost, M., Terry, D., Smith, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Taylor & Francis 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41657
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author Lipp, Ottmar
Craig, B.
Frost, M.
Terry, D.
Smith, J.
author_facet Lipp, Ottmar
Craig, B.
Frost, M.
Terry, D.
Smith, J.
author_sort Lipp, Ottmar
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Facial cues of threat such as anger and other race membership are detected preferentially in visual search tasks. However, it remains unclear whether these facial cues interact in visual search. If both cues equally facilitate search, a symmetrical interaction would be predicted; anger cues should facilitate detection of other race faces and cues of other race membership should facilitate detection of anger. Past research investigating this race by emotional expression interaction in categorisation tasks revealed an asymmetrical interaction. This suggests that cues of other race membership may facilitate the detection of angry faces but not vice versa. Utilising the same stimuli and procedures across two search tasks, participants were asked to search for targets defined by either race or emotional expression. Contrary to the results revealed in the categorisation paradigm, cues of anger facilitated detection of other race faces whereas differences in race did not differentially influence detection of emotion targets.
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format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:08:31Z
publishDate 2014
publisher Taylor & Francis
recordtype eprints
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-416572019-02-19T05:35:23Z Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects Lipp, Ottmar Craig, B. Frost, M. Terry, D. Smith, J. Emotional expression Other race faces Visual search Anger superiority effect Facial cues of threat such as anger and other race membership are detected preferentially in visual search tasks. However, it remains unclear whether these facial cues interact in visual search. If both cues equally facilitate search, a symmetrical interaction would be predicted; anger cues should facilitate detection of other race faces and cues of other race membership should facilitate detection of anger. Past research investigating this race by emotional expression interaction in categorisation tasks revealed an asymmetrical interaction. This suggests that cues of other race membership may facilitate the detection of angry faces but not vice versa. Utilising the same stimuli and procedures across two search tasks, participants were asked to search for targets defined by either race or emotional expression. Contrary to the results revealed in the categorisation paradigm, cues of anger facilitated detection of other race faces whereas differences in race did not differentially influence detection of emotion targets. 2014 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41657 10.1080/02699931.2013.867831 Taylor & Francis fulltext
spellingShingle Emotional expression
Other race faces
Visual search
Anger superiority effect
Lipp, Ottmar
Craig, B.
Frost, M.
Terry, D.
Smith, J.
Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title_full Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title_fullStr Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title_full_unstemmed Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title_short Searching for emotion or race: Task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
title_sort searching for emotion or race: task - irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects
topic Emotional expression
Other race faces
Visual search
Anger superiority effect
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/41657