Abstract
The primacy hypothesis about affection (Zajonc, 1980) holds that positive and negative affective reactions can be elicited with minimal stimulus input and virtually no cognitive processing. This hypothesis challenges the cognitive appraisal viewpoint (Lazarus, 1982), which maintains that affection cannot emerge without prior cognitive mediation. There have been many studies shown that human emotion could be affected by subliminal visual stimulus, so how about subliminal auditory stimulus (SAS)? In this study two pieces of traditional Chinese music were used as SAS, and the unheard music was played in a continuous loop, which was different from the commonly used priming paradigm. 56 undergraduates were randomly divided into two groups; participants in one group were exposed to the subliminal happy music, and in the other group were exposed to the subliminal sad music. A before-and-after self-paired design was used to assess the emotion of all the subjects. During the experiment their galvanic skin response (GSR) and subjective ratings were recorded. The results showed that SAS caused the obviously change on human’s GSR, but there was no change found in their subjective ratings of emotional valence (happy-unhappy). A lot of evidence showed that GSR was more sensitive than subjective ratings for the evaluation to current emotion status. The overall results of our study confirmed this perspective. So, we believed that SAS affected people’s emotion, and this kind of affective priming wasn’t perceived consciously by people themselves.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Vuilleumier, P., Sagiv, N., Hazeltine, E., Poldrack, R.A., Swick, D., Rafal, R.D., Gabrieli, J.D.: Neural fate of seen and unseen faces in visuospatial neglect: a combined event-related functional MRI and event-related potential study. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U S A 98, 3495–3500 (2001)
Blake, R., Logothetis, N.K.: Visual competition. Nature Neuroscience Reviews 3, 13–21 (2002)
Holmes, A., Vuilleumier, P., Eimer, M.: The processing of emotional facial expression is gated by spatial attention: evidence from event-related brain potentials. Cognitive Brain Research 16, 174–184 (2003)
Phillips, M.L., Williams, L.W., Heining, M.: Differential neural responses to overt and covert presentations of facial expressions of fear and disgust. NeuroImage 21, 1484–1496 (2004)
Miell, D., MacDonald, R., Hargreaves, D.J.: Musical communication. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005)
Richard, L.A., Greenwald, A.: Parts outweigh the whole word in unconscious analysis of meaning. Psychological Science 11, 118–123 (2000)
Dehaene, S., Naccache, L.: Imaging unconscious semantic priming. Nature 395, 597–600 (1998)
Kouider, S., Dehaene, S.: Levels of processing during non-conscious perception: a critical review of visual masking. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 362(1481), 857–875 (2007)
Zajonc, R.B.: Feeling and thinking: Preferences need no inferences. American Psychologist 35, 151–175 (1980)
Lazarus, R.S.: Thoughts on the relationship between emotion and cognition. American Psychologist 37, 1019–1024 (1982)
Joseph, B., Helen, E.: The Galvanic Skin Response as a Measure of Emotion in Prejudice. The Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied 42, 149–155 (1956)
Rankin, R.E., Campbell, D.T.: Galvanic skin response to negro and white experimenters. J. Ab. Soc. Psychol. 51, 30–33 (1955)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Liu, J., Ge, Y., Sun, X. (2013). Affective Priming with Subliminal Auditory Stimulus Exposure. In: Harris, D. (eds) Engineering Psychology and Cognitive Ergonomics. Understanding Human Cognition. EPCE 2013. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 8019. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39360-0_17
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-39360-0_17
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-642-39359-4
Online ISBN: 978-3-642-39360-0
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)