中文 |

Research Progress

Working Memory Prioritizes Non-conscious Processing of Threatening Faces

Dec 08, 2016

Non-conscious visual processing of emotional signals, which is shown to exert influences over people's conscious experience and behavior, has typically been assumed to be automatic and outside conscious control.  

A research team led by Dr. YI Jiang from the State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology of Chinese Academy of Sciences has recently demonstrated that this so-called “automatic” process is nonetheless malleable and can be significantly modulated by people's current state of mind and emotion (i.e., what we are holding in consciousness). This study has been published in Psychological Science.

Using the working memory (WM) task combined with the continuous flash suppression (CFS) technique, the researchers found that the invisible faces matching the contents of WM could enjoy a preferential status to gain access into awareness, with the effect highly tuned to threatening signals (i.e., fear and anger) and different from that of bottom-up repetition priming.  

These results provide direct evidence that WM content can act as a top-down mechanism to enhance the non-conscious processing of high-level visual information (i.e., emotional signals). The findings also challenge the long-held notion of complete automaticity of non-consciously triggered emotional processes by revealing the flexibility and adaptability of the emotional system under non-conscious visual processing, thereby bridging the gap between the conscious and non-conscious mind. 

This research was supported by grants from the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, the National Natural Science Foundation of China, and the Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. 

 

Contact Us
  • 86-10-68597521 (day)

    86-10-68597289 (night)

  • 86-10-68511095 (day)

    86-10-68512458 (night)

  • cas_en@cas.cn

  • 52 Sanlihe Rd., Xicheng District,

    Beijing, China (100864)

Copyright © 2002 - Chinese Academy of Sciences