Articles with "faces presented" as a keyword



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Corrigendum to “Invisible own- and other-race faces presented under continuous flash suppression produce affective response biases” [Conscious Cogn. 48 (2017) 273–282]

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Published in 2017 at "Consciousness and Cognition"

DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2017.01.001

Abstract: The authors insert a missing affiliation “The State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China” for Xiaoqing Hu, and modify Yuhao Lu's affiliation to “School of Information… read more here.

Keywords: faces presented; corrigendum invisible; race faces; presented continuous ... See more keywords

Neurophysiological correlates of emotional face perception consciousness

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Published in 2020 at "Neuropsychologia"

DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2020.107554

Abstract: Aim of the present study was to investigate the neurophysiologic correlates of the conscious and not conscious perception of faces (presented for 14, 40, 80 ms) with happy and sad emotional valence. Electroencephalographic data of 22… read more here.

Keywords: faces presented; brain response; perception; brain ... See more keywords

The effect of aging on the dual-route model of emotion processing applied to memory recognition.

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Published in 2024 at "Neuropsychology"

DOI: 10.1037/neu0000972

Abstract: OBJECTIVE Emotional faces are automatically processed in the human brain through a cortical route (conscious processing based on high spatial frequencies, HSF) and a subcortical route (subliminal processing based on low spatial frequencies, LSF). How… read more here.

Keywords: dual route; recognition; route model; faces presented ... See more keywords

From the Viscera to First Impressions: Phase-Dependent Cardio-Visual Signals Bias the Perceived Trustworthiness of Faces

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Published in 2022 at "Psychological Science"

DOI: 10.1177/09567976221131519

Abstract: When we see new people, we rapidly form first impressions. Whereas past research has focused on the role of morphological or emotional cues, we asked whether transient visceral states bias the impressions we form. Across… read more here.

Keywords: presented synchrony; viscera first; trustworthiness faces; first impressions ... See more keywords