Are implicit affective evaluations related to mental rotation performance?

Conscious Cogn. 2021 Sep:94:103178. doi: 10.1016/j.concog.2021.103178. Epub 2021 Jul 31.

Abstract

Conscious and unconscious emotions are related to mental rotation. In this study, we investigated if also unconscious emotional evaluations of the stimuli are related to mental rotation performance. 114 students (39 men, 75 women) solved implicit and explicit affective evaluations and a psychometric mental rotation test with cube and pellet figures. Furthermore, the use of spatial toys, the stereotyping of spatial abilities, and the self-rating in spatial abilities were registered. The mental rotation test with pellet figures was more difficult than the one with cube figures. Mental rotation performance was predicted by the self-rating of spatial abilities. For the cube figures, it was additionally predicted by the implicit affective evaluation of those figures. The results did not differ between men and women. The study provides evidence for a relation between affective emotional evaluations and mental imagery processes, although this does not hold true for all stimulus types.

Keywords: Affective priming; Emotions; Gender differences; Mental imagery; Stereotyping.

MeSH terms

  • Emotions*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Stereotyping*