Affect-Biased Attention as Emotion Regulation
release_5y4he4boejhsncfmztzqrxqf3u
by
Rebecca Todd,
William A. Cunningham,
Adam K. Anderson,
Evan Thompson
2017
Abstract
The affective biasing of attention is not typically considered to be a form of emotion regulation. In this article, we argue that 'affect-biased attention' – the predisposition to attend to certain categories of affectively salient stimuli over others – provides an important component of emotion regulation. Affect-biased attention regulates subsequent emotional responses by tuning one's filters for initial attention and subsequent processing. By reviewing parallel research in the fields of emotion regulation and affect-biased attention, as well as clinical and developmental research on individual differences in attentional biases, we provide convergent evidence that habitual affective filtering processes, tuned and re-tuned over development and situation, modulate emotional responses to the world. Moreover, they do so in a manner that is proactive rather than reactive.
In application/xml+jats
format
Archived Files and Locations
application/pdf
682.7 kB
file_hp6hbwqngja67pbqrkug63mjpy
|
files.osf.io (web) web.archive.org (webarchive) |
post
Stage
unknown
Date 2017-11-06
access all versions, variants, and formats of this works (eg, pre-prints)
Crossref Metadata (via API)
Worldcat
wikidata.org
CORE.ac.uk
Semantic Scholar
Google Scholar