Submission 184
Behavioral and Neurophysiological Effects of Goal Relevance on Emotional Processing
SymposiumTalk-04
Presented by: Gilles Pourtois
According to influential models in psychology and affective sciences, value can be processed irrespective of goals, and it can even highjack them in some circumstances, leading to distraction, errors or maladaptive behavior for instance. However, more recent goal-directed theories (e.g. Moors et al., 2017) emphasize the importance of goals for information processing, and the fact that value actually depends on or results from them. In this talk, I will present behavioral and EEG/ERP results from a series of lab studies we have conducted where we examined the influence of goal relevance on value processing. Either performance monitoring (i.e. assigning value to self-generated actions) or selective attention (i.e. assigning value to specific stimuli or spatial locations in the visual field) was the main cognitive process under consideration in these studies. For both of them, we consistently found that value processing was not automatic, but modulated by the goal relevance of emotion. Moreover, using ERPs, we found that this modulation occurred early following stimulus onset, revealing a perceptual locus for it. These results can be interpreted using recent computational accounts according to which value is one type of information that can be used together and in a flexible manner with goal to guide the active sampling of the environment.