See what you want to see: Motivational influences on visual perception
E. Balcetis, and D. Dunning. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 91 (4):
612-625(2006)
Abstract
People's motivational states - their wishes and preferences -influence their processing of visual stimuli. In 5 studies, participants shown an ambiguous figure (e.g., one that could be seen either as the letter B or the number 13) tended to report seeing the interpretation that assigned them to outcomes they favored. This finding was affirmed by unobtrusive and implicit measures of perception (e.g., eye tracking, lexical decision tasks) and by experimental procedures demonstrating that participants were aware only of the single (usually favored) interpretation they saw at the time they viewed the stimulus. These studies suggest that the impact of motivation on information processing extends down into preconscious processing of stimuli in the visual environment and thus guides what the visual system presents to conscious awareness.
%0 Journal Article
%1 balcetis2006see
%A Balcetis, Emily
%A Dunning, David
%D 2006
%I APA AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION
%J Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
%K attention cognition motivation perception psychology visual
%N 4
%P 612-625
%T See what you want to see: Motivational influences on visual perception
%U http://research.chicagogsb.edu/cdr/docs/dunning.pdf
%V 91
%X People's motivational states - their wishes and preferences -influence their processing of visual stimuli. In 5 studies, participants shown an ambiguous figure (e.g., one that could be seen either as the letter B or the number 13) tended to report seeing the interpretation that assigned them to outcomes they favored. This finding was affirmed by unobtrusive and implicit measures of perception (e.g., eye tracking, lexical decision tasks) and by experimental procedures demonstrating that participants were aware only of the single (usually favored) interpretation they saw at the time they viewed the stimulus. These studies suggest that the impact of motivation on information processing extends down into preconscious processing of stimuli in the visual environment and thus guides what the visual system presents to conscious awareness.
@article{balcetis2006see,
abstract = {People's motivational states - their wishes and preferences -influence their processing of visual stimuli. In 5 studies, participants shown an ambiguous figure (e.g., one that could be seen either as the letter B or the number 13) tended to report seeing the interpretation that assigned them to outcomes they favored. This finding was affirmed by unobtrusive and implicit measures of perception (e.g., eye tracking, lexical decision tasks) and by experimental procedures demonstrating that participants were aware only of the single (usually favored) interpretation they saw at the time they viewed the stimulus. These studies suggest that the impact of motivation on information processing extends down into preconscious processing of stimuli in the visual environment and thus guides what the visual system presents to conscious awareness. },
added-at = {2009-12-06T12:28:16.000+0100},
author = {Balcetis, Emily and Dunning, David},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2c87e6e8b4b91b3f8417fef11b97f5f85/yish},
interhash = {49374e8e9eded7ee468ddd7301ee1275},
intrahash = {c87e6e8b4b91b3f8417fef11b97f5f85},
journal = {Journal of Personality and Social Psychology},
keywords = {attention cognition motivation perception psychology visual},
number = 4,
pages = {612-625},
publisher = {APA AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION},
timestamp = {2009-12-06T12:28:16.000+0100},
title = {See what you want to see: Motivational influences on visual perception},
url = {http://research.chicagogsb.edu/cdr/docs/dunning.pdf},
volume = 91,
year = 2006
}