“…However, to our knowledge, there are not studies addressing the interaction between cognitive performance observed in these training programs and emotional stimuli. For filling this gap here we study two types of stimuli, scenes and faces (Coan & Allen, 2007), because (a) they are important in evolutionary terms (Carretié et al, 2013), and (b) they are known to interact with cognitive requirements (e.g., Eastwood, Smilek, & Merikle, 2003). Furthermore, the most frequently administered visual stimuli in affective neuroscience are based on faces depicting different emotional expressions (e.g., POFA, Ebner, Riediger, & Lindenberger, 2010;KDEF, Lundqvist and Litton, 1998) or scenes showing positive, neutral and negative displays (e.g., IAPS, Lang, Bradley, & Cuthbert 2005).…”