Abstract

Optimism bias and positive attention bias have important highly similar implications for mental health but have only been examined in isolation. Investigating the causal relationships between these biases can improve the understanding of their underlying cognitive mechanisms, leading to new directions in neurocognitive research and revealing important information about normal functioning as well as the development, maintenance, and treatment of psychological diseases. In the current project, we hypothesized that optimistic expectancies can exert causal influences on attention deployment. To test this causal relation, we conducted two experiments in which we manipulated optimistic and pessimistic expectancies regarding future rewards and punishments. In a subsequent visual search task, we examined participants’ attention to positive (i.e., rewarding) and negative (i.e., punishing) target stimuli, measuring their eye gaze behavior and reaction times. In both experiments, participants’ attention was guided toward reward compared with punishment when optimistic expectancies were induced. Additionally, in Experiment 2, participants’ attention was guided toward punishment compared with reward when pessimistic expectancies were induced. However, the effect of optimistic (rather than pessimistic) expectancies on attention deployment was stronger. A key characteristic of optimism bias is that people selectively update expectancies in an optimistic direction, not in a pessimistic direction, when receiving feedback. As revealed in our studies, selective attention to rewarding versus punishing evidence when people are optimistic might explain this updating asymmetry. Thus, the current data can help clarify why optimistic expectancies are difficult to overcome. Our findings elucidate the cognitive mechanisms underlying optimism and attention bias, which can yield a better understanding of their benefits for mental health.

Highlights

  • Charlie Chaplin once said that “you’ll never see a rainbow, if you’re looking down”

  • Is that true? Does being optimistic or pessimistic influence which parts of our environment we pay attention to? To answer this question, we focus on the interplay between two important cognitive phenomena displayed by humans: optimism bias and positive attention bias

  • We argue that examining optimistic expectancies in relation to attention deployment could yield a better understanding of optimism bias and its benefits in everyday life as in the clinical domain

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Summary

Introduction

Charlie Chaplin once said that “you’ll never see a rainbow, if you’re looking down”. His famous saying implies that we do not notice the good things around us with a pessimistic attitude. One could imagine that, when being optimistic, people initially orient their attention (primarily an automatic process) toward both good and bad news but later maintain attention (primarily a controlled process) selectively on good news (see [19] for differences in attention orientation and maintenance on emotional stimuli shown by dysphoric participants) Such a finding would have crucial implications for a more profound understanding of the concrete nature of biased expectancy-attention interplay in healthy individuals and may fundamentally inspire psychotherapy. The aim of the present studies was to determine if experimentally induced optimistic and pessimistic expectancies regarding future gains and losses causally impact attention deployment to stimuli signaling reward (i.e., gain) and punishment (i.e., loss) For both experiments, we hypothesized that (1) gain and loss cues presented during the expectancy phase of the experiments elicit an affective response that can be attributed to optimism and pessimism (manipulation check). E-Prime 2.0 Professional (Psychology Software Tools, Pittsburgh, PA) was used to present stimuli and record the participants’ responses

Experimental procedure
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