“…We expected, 1) task-irrelevant novel sounds to evoke prolonged RT compared to standard sounds (distraction effect; Escera et al, 1998;Schröger & Wolff, 1998) and increased PDR (Murphy et al, 2011;Widmann et al, 2018), 2) reduced distraction effects in response to emotional novel sounds compared to neutral novel sounds (Max et al, 2015) but increased PDR to emotional vs. neutral novel sounds (Bonmassar et al, 2020) and 3) a negative correlation at trial level between distraction effects and changes in the PDR for emotional distractor sounds, indicating a direct relation between emotion-induced enhanced level of arousal and reduced emotion-related distraction effects. A correlation at a trial level would imply shared attentional mechanisms involved in the processing emotional sounds, whereas a correlation at a participant level, would imply different mechanisms involved (for an example of different levels of analysis see LoTemplio et al, 2021). Moreover, we were interested in effects of temperament, because individual differences in emotional, motor and attentional reactivity and self-regulations processes modulating such reactivity may influence distraction effects (Pesonen et al, 2010;Rueda & Rothbart, 2009).…”