Despite an initial focus on negative threatening stimuli, researchers have more recently expanded the investigation of attentional biases toward positive rewarding stimuli. The present meta-analysis systematically compared attentional bias for positive compared with neutral visual stimuli across 243 studies (N ϭ 9,120 healthy participants) that used different types of attentional paradigms and positive stimuli. Factors were tested that, as postulated by several attentional models derived from theories of emotion, might modulate this bias. Overall, results showed a significant, albeit modest (Hedges' g ϭ .258), attentional bias for positive as compared with neutral stimuli. Moderator analyses revealed that the magnitude of this attentional bias varied as a function of arousal and that this bias was significantly larger when the emotional stimulus was relevant to specific concerns (e.g., hunger) of the participants compared with other positive stimuli that were less relevant to the participants' concerns. Moreover, the moderator analyses showed that attentional bias for positive stimuli was larger in paradigms that measure early, rather than late, attentional processing, suggesting that attentional bias for positive stimuli occurs rapidly and involuntarily. Implications for theories of emotion and attention are discussed.Keywords: attentional bias, positive emotion, reward, emotional theories, attention Emotions guide behavior (e.g., approach or avoidance), modulate many cognitive processes (e.g., memory and decision making), and signal the presence of important events in the environment . When several stimuli compete for access to the limited attentional resources of an individual, a bias toward emotional stimuli allows efficient detection of these events and rapid preparation of adaptive reactions (Pourtois, Schettino, & Vuilleumier, 2013). Attentional bias for emotional stimuli has attracted considerable interest in neuroscience (Vuilleumier, 2005) and psychology (Van Bockstaele et al., 2014;Yiend, 2010). Initially, experimental research in both fields mainly focused on the negative emotion of fear. Indeed, fear was one of the first emotions investigated in an experimental setting in neuroscience through fear conditioning in rodents (see LeDoux, 1996). The earliest investigations in human research tried to extend these findings with the use of fear-relevant stimuli such as faces expressing fear or anger (Mogg & Bradley, 1998;Vuilleumier, Armony, Driver, & Dolan, 2001). In addition, a large corpus of studies investigated attentional bias for threatening stimuli in healthy participants, as well as in participants experiencing a variety of anxiety disorders (for an encompassing meta-analysis on anxious and nonanxious participants, see Bar-Haim, Lamy, Pergamin, Bakermans-Kranenburg, & van IJzendoorn, 2007).Despite this initial focus on threatening stimuli, researchers have more recently expanded the investigation of attentional biases to rewarding stimuli. In the last decade, the topic of attentional bias for these...