“…In many cases emotion is an irrelevant property of an attended object either because it is the target (as, for example, in the emotional Stroop task; see Phaf & Kan, 2007 for a meta-analysis; see Williams et al, 1996 for a review), or because it could be the target (as, for example, in variants of the visual search task in which the emotionality of distractors in the array is manipulated; e.g., Hodsoll, Viding & Lavie, 2011;Lipp & Waters, 2007;Miltner, Krieschel, Hecht, Trippe & Weiss, 2004). In other studies, emotional distractors are distinct from the target stimulus, but are presented in attended spatial locationseither because they are presented in the same location as targets (e.g., Attar & Müller, 2012;Haas, Omura, Constable & Canli, 2006Sussman, Heller, Miller & Mohanty, 2013), or at fixation (e.g., Augst, Kleinsorge & Kunde, 2014;Erthal et al, 2005;Fernandes, Koji, Dixon & Aquino, 2011) which is an inherently attended location (see Beck & Lavie, 2005). When distractors are relevant, or share properties with relevant information (i.e., are a property of an attended object, or are presented in an attended location), there is robust evidence that emotional information is more distracting than neutral information.…”