نتایج جستجو برای: happy facial phenotype

تعداد نتایج: 227140  

2011
Jukka M. Leppänen Jenny Richmond Vanessa K. Vogel-Farley Margaret C. Moulson Charles A. Nelson

Categorical perception, demonstrated as reduced discrimination of within-category relative to between-category differences in stimuli, has been found in a variety of perceptual domains in adults. To examine the development of categorical perception in the domain of facial expression processing, we used behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) methods to assess discrimination of within-categ...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2005
Mark A Williams Francis McGlone David F Abbott Jason B Mattingley

Facial expressions of emotion elicit increased activity in the human amygdala. Such increases are particularly evident for expressions that convey potential threat to the observer, and arise even when the face is masked from awareness. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine whether the amygdala responds differentially to threatening (fearful) versus nonthreatening (happ...

2016
Bingbing Li Gang Cheng Dajun Zhang Dongtao Wei Lei Qiao Xiangpeng Wang Xianwei Che

Recent neuroimaging studies suggest that neutral infant faces compared to neutral adult faces elicit greater activity in brain areas associated with face processing, attention, empathic response, reward, and movement. However, whether infant facial expressions evoke larger brain responses than adult facial expressions remains unclear. Here, we performed event-related functional magnetic resonan...

2016
Mikko J. Peltola Jukka M. Leppänen Tiina Palokangas Jari K. Hietanen Mikko Peltola

The present study investigated whether facial expressions modulate visual attention in 7month-old infants. First, infants’ looking duration to individually presented fearful, happy, and novel facial expressions was compared to looking duration to a control stimulus (scrambled face). The face with a novel expression was included to examine the hypothesis that the earlier findings of greater allo...

Journal: :Journal of vision 2010
Etienne B Roesch David Sander Christian Mumenthaler Dirk Kerzel Klaus R Scherer

To investigate the mechanisms involved in automatic processing of facial expressions, we used the QUEST procedure to measure the display durations needed to make a gender decision on emotional faces portraying fearful, happy, or neutral facial expressions. In line with predictions of appraisal theories of emotion, our results showed greater processing priority of emotional stimuli regardless of...

Journal: :Cognition & emotion 2014
Karly N Neath Roxane J Itier

The current study investigated the effects of presentation time and fixation to expression-specific diagnostic features on emotion discrimination performance, in a backward masking task. While no differences were found when stimuli were presented for 16.67 ms, differences between facial emotions emerged beyond the happy-superiority effect at presentation times as early as 50 ms. Happy expressio...

Journal: :Child development 1996
D L Mumme A Fernald C Herrera

The independent effects of facial and vocal emotional signals and of positive and negative signals on infant behavior were investigated in a novel toy social referencing paradigm. 90 12-month-old infants and their mothers were assigned to an expression condition (neutral, happy, or fear) nested within a modality condition (face-only or voice-only). Each infant participated in 3 trials: a baseli...

2016
Anna Pecchinenda Manuel Petrucci

Direction of eye gaze cues spatial attention, and typically this cueing effect is not modulated by the expression of a face unless top-down processes are explicitly or implicitly involved. To investigate the role of cognitive control on gaze cueing by emotional faces, participants performed a gaze cueing task with happy, angry, or neutral faces under high (i.e., counting backward by 7) or low c...

Journal: :Biological psychology 2013
Jari K Hietanen Piia Astikainen

Does contextual affective information influence the processing of facial expressions already at the relatively early stages of face processing? We measured event-related brain potentials to happy and sad facial expressions primed by preceding pictures with affectively positive and negative scenes. The face-sensitive N170 response amplitudes showed a clear affective priming effect: N170 amplitud...

Journal: :Cognition 2007
Andrew P Bayliss Alexandra Frischen Mark J Fenske Steven P Tipper

Gaze direction signals another person's focus of interest. Facial expressions convey information about their mental state. Appropriate responses to these signals should reflect their combined influence, yet current evidence suggests that gaze-cueing effects for objects near an observed face are not modulated by its emotional expression. Here, we extend the investigation of perceived gaze direct...

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