Refine
Document Type
- Article (17)
- Postprint (7)
- Other (4)
- Conference Proceeding (2)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Language
- English (31)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (31)
Keywords
- emotion (10)
- tVNS (6)
- Emotion (4)
- salivary alpha-amylase (4)
- transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (4)
- EEG (3)
- P300 (3)
- attention (3)
- memory (3)
- norepinephrine (3)
- Amygdala (2)
- Appearance (2)
- Biomarker (2)
- Data pooling (2)
- ERP (2)
- ERPs (2)
- Facial Expressions (2)
- Information (2)
- Metaanalysis (2)
- Non-invasive vagus nerve stimulation (2)
- Noradrenaline (2)
- Perception (2)
- Recognition Memory (2)
- Recollection (2)
- Trust (2)
- Trustworthiness (2)
- adaptability (2)
- affective neuroscience (2)
- confidence (2)
- emotional intensity (2)
- episodic memory (2)
- granularity (2)
- health and well-being (2)
- individual differences (2)
- interoception (2)
- interoceptive sensibility (2)
- learning and memory (2)
- linguistics (2)
- locus coeruleus (2)
- neuroimaging (2)
- perception (2)
- psychophysiology (2)
- recognition (2)
- recollection (2)
- sAA (2)
- training interventions (2)
- well-being (2)
- words (2)
- Alpha-amylase (1)
- Chronic stress (1)
- Cognitive control (1)
- Conflict adaptation (1)
- Event-related potential (1)
- Event-related potentials (1)
- Gedächtnis (1)
- HRV (1)
- Hair cortisol (1)
- Heart Rate (1)
- Inhibitory Control (1)
- Interoception (1)
- LPP (1)
- Late positive potential (1)
- Memory (1)
- N2 (1)
- N2/P3 (1)
- Neurostimulation (1)
- New effect (1)
- Old (1)
- Old/New effect (1)
- Pooled Data (1)
- Retrieval (1)
- Salivary (1)
- Spontaneous memory (1)
- Startle (1)
- Transcutaneous Auricular Vagus Nerve Stimulation (1)
- Transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (1)
- Triarchic Model of Psychopathy (1)
- aging (1)
- autonomic nervous system (1)
- cortical thickness (1)
- effect (1)
- event-related potentials (1)
- fMRI (1)
- fMRT (1)
- heart (1)
- heart rate (1)
- new effect (1)
- old (1)
- old/new (1)
- rate variability (1)
- remember/know (1)
- serial position effect (1)
- sex (1)
- source memory (1)
- vagus nerve (1)
Institute
Due to their ability to capture attention, emotional stimuli tend to benefit from enhanced perceptual processing, which can be helpful when such stimuli are task-relevant but hindering when they are task-irrelevant. Altered emotion-attention interactions have been associated with symptoms of affective disturbances, and emerging research focuses on improving emotion-attention interactions to prevent or treat affective disorders. In line with the Human Affectome Project's emphasis on linguistic components, we also analyzed the language used to describe attention-related aspects of emotion, and highlighted terms related to domains such as conscious awareness, motivational effects of attention, social attention, and emotion regulation. These terms were discussed within a broader review of available evidence regarding the neural correlates of (1) Emotion-Attention Interactions in Perception, (2) Emotion-Attention Interactions in Learning and Memory, (3) Individual Differences in Emotion-Attention Interactions, and (4) Training and Interventions to Optimize Emotion-Attention Interactions. This comprehensive approach enabled an integrative overview of the current knowledge regarding the mechanisms of emotion-attention interactions at multiple levels of analysis, and identification of emerging directions for future investigations.