Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5041737 Consciousness and Cognition 2017 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Multivariate analysis predicts object relevance from event-related potentials.•Desirability and relevance of everyday objects might be automatically processed.•Association of desirability, relevance, valence and arousal point to shared mechanism.•Unconscious, automatic processing of object features could facilitate decision-making.

Potentially decision-relevant stimuli have been proposed to undergo immediate semantic processing. The current study investigated whether information regarding the general desirability ('Wanting') of visually presented 'everyday' objects was rapidly and automatically processed. Participants completed a foreground task while their electroencephalogram (EEG) was recorded, and task-irrelevant images were presented in the background. Following this, participants rated the images with regards to Wanting and the potentially related attributes of Relevance, Familiarity, Aesthetic Pleasantness and Time Reference. Multivariate pattern classification was used to predict the ratings from patterns of EEG data. Prediction of Wanting and Relevance was possible between 100 and 150 ms following stimulus presentation. The other dimensions could not be predicted. Wanting and Relevance ratings were highly correlated and displayed similar feature weight maps. The current results suggest that the general desirability and subjective relevance of everyday objects is rapidly and automatically processed for a wide range of visual stimuli.

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