Are visual threats prioritized without awareness? A critical review and meta analysis involving 3 behavioral paradigms and 2696 observers
Are visual threats prioritized without awareness? A critical review and meta analysis involving 3 behavioral paradigms and 2696 observers
Given capacity limits, only a subset of stimuli give rise to a conscious percept. Neurocognitive models suggest that humans have evolved mechanisms that operate without awareness and prioritize threatening stimuli over neutral stimuli in subsequent perception. In this meta analysis, we review evidence for this ‘standard hypothesis’ emanating from three widely used, but rather different experimental paradigms that have been used to manipulate awareness. We found a small pooled threat-bias effect in the masked visual probe paradigm, a medium effect in the binocular rivalry paradigm and highly inconsistent effects in the breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm. Substantial heterogeneity was explained by the stimulus type: the only threat stimuli that were robustly prioritized across all three paradigms were fearful faces. Meta regression revealed that anxiety may modulate threat-biases, but only under specific presentation conditions. We also found that insufficiently rigorous awareness measures, inadequate control of response biases and low level confounds may undermine claims of genuine unconscious threat processing. Considering the data together, we suggest that uncritical acceptance of the standard hypothesis is premature: current behavioral evidence for threat-sensitive visual processing that operates without awareness is weak.
934-968
Hedger, Nicholas
ad57df70-75e3-43f3-a56e-d7416e06f334
Gray, Katie L.H.
b86092bd-a484-4e3f-a367-4c709e90ed77
Garner, Matthew
3221c5b3-b951-4fec-b456-ec449e4ce072
Adams, Wendy J.
25685aaa-fc54-4d25-8d65-f35f4c5ab688
1 September 2016
Hedger, Nicholas
ad57df70-75e3-43f3-a56e-d7416e06f334
Gray, Katie L.H.
b86092bd-a484-4e3f-a367-4c709e90ed77
Garner, Matthew
3221c5b3-b951-4fec-b456-ec449e4ce072
Adams, Wendy J.
25685aaa-fc54-4d25-8d65-f35f4c5ab688
Hedger, Nicholas, Gray, Katie L.H., Garner, Matthew and Adams, Wendy J.
(2016)
Are visual threats prioritized without awareness? A critical review and meta analysis involving 3 behavioral paradigms and 2696 observers.
Psychological Bulletin, 142 (9), .
(doi:10.1037/bul0000054).
Abstract
Given capacity limits, only a subset of stimuli give rise to a conscious percept. Neurocognitive models suggest that humans have evolved mechanisms that operate without awareness and prioritize threatening stimuli over neutral stimuli in subsequent perception. In this meta analysis, we review evidence for this ‘standard hypothesis’ emanating from three widely used, but rather different experimental paradigms that have been used to manipulate awareness. We found a small pooled threat-bias effect in the masked visual probe paradigm, a medium effect in the binocular rivalry paradigm and highly inconsistent effects in the breaking continuous flash suppression paradigm. Substantial heterogeneity was explained by the stimulus type: the only threat stimuli that were robustly prioritized across all three paradigms were fearful faces. Meta regression revealed that anxiety may modulate threat-biases, but only under specific presentation conditions. We also found that insufficiently rigorous awareness measures, inadequate control of response biases and low level confounds may undermine claims of genuine unconscious threat processing. Considering the data together, we suggest that uncritical acceptance of the standard hypothesis is premature: current behavioral evidence for threat-sensitive visual processing that operates without awareness is weak.
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 February 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 September 2016
Published date: 1 September 2016
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This article may not exactly replicate the final version published in the APA journal. It is not the copy of record
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Local EPrints ID: 388308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388308
ISSN: 0033-2909
PURE UUID: 244ded76-2a4d-4eb3-b83d-addb6208aee9
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Date deposited: 24 Feb 2016 09:00
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:19
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Author:
Nicholas Hedger
Author:
Katie L.H. Gray
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