01806nas a2200181 4500000000100000008004100001260007600042653001200118653001400130653002200144100002200166245005000188300001200238490000600250520134000256022001401596020001401610 1999 d c07/1999bSociedad Española para el Estudio de la Ansiedad y el Estrés10aEmotion10aCognition10afacial expression1 aFrancisco Esteves00aCognitive bias in emotional facial expression a217-2270 v53 aThe human face is a very special stimulus. The face is associated with our identity, and it is a mean to communicate feelings and emotional states. Thus, it is assumed that the role played on the regulation of social contacts was important to the survival chances of our ancestors. For example, the ability to quickly identify threatening intentions on a first encounter with a stranger. An automatic, non-aware, processing of angry faces has been showed in a series of classical conditioning experiments, using skin conductance responses as a measure of conditioning. When an angry facial expression was associated with an aversive stimulus, the conditioned response was larger than if a happy face was used as the conditioned stimulus. This was obtained even when awareness of the conditioned faces was prevented by means of backward masking. In two visual search experiments, using schematic faces displaying different emotional expressions, a bias for a better detection of angry faces was obtained. Thus, an angry face among happy faces was detected faster and with fewer errors than a happy face among angry ones. These results are consistent with the general perception bias found in anxiety disorders, and with the studies showing priority on the processing of stimuli and situations potentially threatening to the individuals. a1134-7937 a2174-0437