Detection of angry, happy and sad faces among neutral backgrounds was investigated in three single emotion tasks and an emotion comparison task using schematic (Experiment 1) and photographic faces (Experiment 2). Both experiments provided evidence for the preferential detection of anger displays over displays of other negative or positive emotions in tasks that employed all three target emotions. Evidence for preferential detection of negative emotion in general was found only with schematic faces. The present results are consistent with the notion that the detection of displays of anger, and to some extent sadness, does not reflect on a pre-attentive mechanism, but is the result of a more efficient visual search than is the detection of p...
Recent findings demonstrated that negative emotional faces (sad, anger or fear) tend to attract atte...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...
Detection of angry, happy and sad faces among neutral backgrounds was investigated in three single e...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
The rapid detection of facial expressions of anger or threat has obvious adaptive value. In this stu...
Faces provide cues for judgments regarding the emotional state of individuals. Using signal-detectio...
AbstractPrevious research indicates angry expressions are detected faster than happy ones, but most ...
Past literature has indicated that face inversion either attenuates emotion detection advantages in ...
Perceivers who can accurately identify an emotion are more likely to engage in successful social int...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
Previous research has suggested that in crowds of faces angry faces are detected fastest, whereas, o...
Can emotional expressions automatically attract attention in virtue of their affective content? Prev...
Recent findings demonstrated that negative emotional faces (sad, anger or fear) tend to attract atte...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...
Detection of angry, happy and sad faces among neutral backgrounds was investigated in three single e...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
The rapid detection of facial expressions of anger or threat has obvious adaptive value. In this stu...
Faces provide cues for judgments regarding the emotional state of individuals. Using signal-detectio...
AbstractPrevious research indicates angry expressions are detected faster than happy ones, but most ...
Past literature has indicated that face inversion either attenuates emotion detection advantages in ...
Perceivers who can accurately identify an emotion are more likely to engage in successful social int...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
Previous research has suggested that in crowds of faces angry faces are detected fastest, whereas, o...
Can emotional expressions automatically attract attention in virtue of their affective content? Prev...
Recent findings demonstrated that negative emotional faces (sad, anger or fear) tend to attract atte...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...
Previous research has provided inconsistent results regarding visual search for emotional faces, yie...