The Subliminal Affective Priming Effect of Facial Expression and Its Mechanisms
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1)State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;2)Department of Psychology, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 101408, China

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This work was supported by a grant from the National Key R&D Program of China (2021ZD0204202).

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    Abstract:

    Can emotional information be unconsciously processed by the brain? The subliminal affective priming effect provides rigorous evidence for this question. With the visual masking and continuous flash suppression paradigms, the subliminal affective priming effect has been found in tasks on attention and memory, social evaluation and even behavior preference when invisibly facial expressions are employed as primes. It has also been shown that the participants’ skin conductance level and cardiovascular reactivity are enhanced in these tasks. The findings from studies that aimed to explore neural mechanisms suggest that unconsciously perceived facial expressions have an influence on the early perceptual processing and late emotional meaning analysis of the target stimuli, in which the amygdala plays an important role. The affective primacy hypothesis and the feelings-as-information theory are proposed to explain the mechanism of the subliminal affective priming effect from the perspectives of domain specificity of affective system and affective attribution. Finally, potential directions for future studies are suggested.

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LI Cai-Wen, CHEN Qin, XUAN Yu-Ming, FU Xiao-Lan. The Subliminal Affective Priming Effect of Facial Expression and Its Mechanisms[J]. Progress in Biochemistry and Biophysics,2023,50(11):2533-2549

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History
  • Received:October 08,2022
  • Revised:October 12,2023
  • Accepted:January 11,2023
  • Online: November 22,2023
  • Published: November 20,2023