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      Practice makes perfect: Training the interpretation of emotional ambiguity

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      Cognition and Emotion
      Informa UK Limited

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          Abstract

          The interpretation of emotionally ambiguous words, sentences, or scenarios can be altered through training procedures that are collectively called cognitive bias modification for interpretation (CBM-I). In three experiments, we systematically manipulated the nature of the training in order to discriminate between emotional priming and ambiguity resolution accounts of training effects. In Experiment 1 participants completed word fragments that were consistently related to either a negative or benign interpretation of an ambiguous sentence. In a subsequent semantic priming task they demonstrated an interpretation bias, in that they were faster to identify relatedness of targets that were associated with the training-congruent meaning of an emotionally ambiguous homograph. We then manipulated the training sentences to show that interpretation bias was eliminated when participants simply completed valenced word fragments following unrelated sentences (Experiment 2), or completed fragments that were related to emotional but unambiguous sentences (Experiment 3). Only when participants were required to actively resolve emotionally ambiguous sentences during training did changes in interpretation emerge at test. Findings suggest that CBM-I achieves its effects by altering a production rule that aids the selection of meaning from emotionally ambiguous alternatives, in line with an ambiguity resolution account.

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          Most cited references40

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          Semantic priming and retrieval from lexical memory: Roles of inhibitionless spreading activation and limited-capacity attention.

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            MRC psycholinguistic database: Machine-usable dictionary, version 2.00

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              Induced emotional interpretation bias and anxiety.

              Five experiments are reported showing that the interpretation of personally relevant emotional information can be modified by systematic exposure to congruent exemplars. Participants were induced to interpret ambiguous information in a relatively threatening or a benign way. Comparison with a baseline condition suggested that negative and positive induction had similar but opposing effects. Induction of an interpretative bias did not require active generation of personally relevant meanings, but such active processing was necessary before state anxiety changed in parallel with the induced interpretative bias. These findings provide evidence consistent with a causal link between the deployment of interpretative bias and anxiety and reveal something of the processes underlying this association.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cognition and Emotion
                Cognition and Emotion
                Informa UK Limited
                0269-9931
                1464-0600
                April 11 2015
                May 18 2016
                March 26 2015
                May 18 2016
                : 30
                : 4
                : 654-668
                Article
                10.1080/02699931.2015.1020768
                25807872
                231d4340-70b3-4dc4-ad63-36e6cec18f66
                © 2016
                History

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