Abstract

Most studies on verticality's embodiment showed that up positions were related to positive emotions whereas down positions were related to negative ones (Meier & Robinson, 2004). Research on motion perception found that a parabolic motion both induced animation attribution (Tremoulet & Feldman, 2000) and implied negative feelings (Chafi, Schiaratura, & Rusinek, 2012; Podevin, 2009; Podevin, Chafi, Rusinek, & Békaert, 2012). We hypothesized that seeing a parabolic downward motion will increase both the memorization for words and the execution's speed of a serial subtraction compared to a parabolic upward motion. Results showed that the downward motion had enhancing effects both on the serial subtraction and on the number of recalled words, independently of their valence. These findings are interpreted as marking processes related to an adaptive behavior in response to a negative stimulus.

Details

Title
Perceiving a negatively connoted stimulus imply enhanced performances: the case of a moving object
Author
Chafi, Alhadi; Rusinek, Stephane; Schiaratura, Loris; Delescluse, Sebastien; Brouillet, Thibaut
First page
331
Publication year
2013
Publication date
2013
Publisher
Polish Academy of Sciences
ISSN
00792993
e-ISSN
16417844
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1445367059
Copyright
Copyright Versita 2013