“…By contrast, the LPP, a centro-parietal component occurring~300-500 ms poststimulus, signifies allocation of attentional resources for a better, more detailed evaluation of emotional content at a later stage of visual processing (Sabatinelli et al, 2013;Schupp et al, 2000). Despite the close link between attentional orienting toward emotionally significant stimuli and perceptually salient stimulus properties (Bradley, Hamby, Löw, & Lang, 2007;Delplanque, N'diaye, Scherer, & Grandjean, 2007;Miskovic et al, 2015;Schettino, Keil, Porcu, & Müller, 2016), there is mixed evidence regarding whether picture color influences affective processing per se (Cano, Class, & Polich, 2009;Codispoti, De Cesarei, & Ferrari, 2011;Weymar, Löw, Melzig, & Hamm, 2009) and, if so, at which stage of visual processing the influence of color on affective content extraction might be most pronounced. Although two previous studies by Weymar et al (2009) and Codispoti et al (2011) revealed no evidence for an influence of color on heightened visual cortical activity during affective picture viewing, Cano et al (2009) reported ERP emotional modulations late in the processing stream (~300-500 ms) for color but not grayscale pictures.…”