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I’ve seen enough! Prolonged and repeated exposure to disgusting stimuli increases oculomotor avoidance.

Thomas Armstrong, Jeremy G. Stewart, Edwin S. Dalmaijer, Megan Rowe, Siri Danielson, Mira Engel, Brooklynn Bailey, Matthew J. Morris

2020Emotion31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 84), we replicated Experiment 1 with a novel set of disgusting images, as well as other unpleasant image categories (suicide, threat) and pleasant images. We found that disgusting stimuli were viewed less than the other unpleasant image categories, and we again found that viewing of disgusting images decreased with prolonged and repeated exposure. Further, we replicated the finding that disgust ratings predicted decreasing viewing of disgusting images, but only for prolonged exposure (within-trial). Unexpectedly, we found that disgust ratings predicted a similar pattern of decreasing viewing for the suicide and threat images as well. These findings suggest that disgust inhibits perceptual contact, but in competition with motivational processes that steer attention toward pathogen threats. We discuss the implications for measuring disgust with eye tracking. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

DisgustPsychologyPerceptionPsycINFOVisual perceptionCognitive psychologyAudiologySocial psychologyNeuroscienceMedicineMEDLINELawAngerPolitical sciencePsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentMisinformation and Its Impacts
I’ve seen enough! Prolonged and repeated exposure to disgusting stimuli increases oculomotor avoidance. | Litcius