The “self” shapes the way in which we process the world around us. It makes sense then, that self-related information is reliably prioritised over non self-related information in cognition. How might other factors such as self-compatibility shape the way self-relevant information is prioritised? The present work asks whether affective consistency between the self and arbitrarily self-associated stimuli influences the degree to which self-prioritisation can be observed. To this end, participants were asked to associate themselves with either a positive or a negative concept and to then indicate if a given stimulus (Experiment 1: Emotional faces; Experiment 2: Luminance cues) and an identity label matched. If affective consistency is key to s...
A relatively new development concerning literature pertaining to the concept of self-bias has highli...
Behavioral and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that people process preferentially self-relate...
Recent research has suggested that self-relevance automatically enhances stimulus processing (i.e., ...
The “self” shapes the way in which we process the world around us. It makes sense then, that self-re...
Abstract The self, like the concept of central "gravity", facilitates the processing of information ...
Recent research has revealed a pervasive bias for self-relevant information during decision-making, ...
People display systematic priorities to self-related stimuli. As the self is not a unified entity, h...
Recently, Sui and colleagues (2012) introduced a new paradigm to measure perceptual self-prioritizat...
A stable self-representation has an intrinsically beneficial connotation for information processing:...
To investigate self-prioritization independently of stimulus familiarity, Sui et al. (J Exp Psychol ...
An extensive literature has revealed the benefits of self-relevance during stimulus processing. Comp...
People show systematic biases in perception, memory, attention and decision-making to prioritise inf...
Funding This work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2019-010).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
An emerging literature has suggested that self-relevance automatically enhances stimulus processing ...
AbstractSelf-related stimuli, such as one’s own name or face, are processed faster and more accurate...
A relatively new development concerning literature pertaining to the concept of self-bias has highli...
Behavioral and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that people process preferentially self-relate...
Recent research has suggested that self-relevance automatically enhances stimulus processing (i.e., ...
The “self” shapes the way in which we process the world around us. It makes sense then, that self-re...
Abstract The self, like the concept of central "gravity", facilitates the processing of information ...
Recent research has revealed a pervasive bias for self-relevant information during decision-making, ...
People display systematic priorities to self-related stimuli. As the self is not a unified entity, h...
Recently, Sui and colleagues (2012) introduced a new paradigm to measure perceptual self-prioritizat...
A stable self-representation has an intrinsically beneficial connotation for information processing:...
To investigate self-prioritization independently of stimulus familiarity, Sui et al. (J Exp Psychol ...
An extensive literature has revealed the benefits of self-relevance during stimulus processing. Comp...
People show systematic biases in perception, memory, attention and decision-making to prioritise inf...
Funding This work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust (RPG-2019-010).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
An emerging literature has suggested that self-relevance automatically enhances stimulus processing ...
AbstractSelf-related stimuli, such as one’s own name or face, are processed faster and more accurate...
A relatively new development concerning literature pertaining to the concept of self-bias has highli...
Behavioral and neuroimaging studies have demonstrated that people process preferentially self-relate...
Recent research has suggested that self-relevance automatically enhances stimulus processing (i.e., ...