Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avoid methodological confounds in visual search studies using emotional photographic faces. These confounds were argued to cause the frequently observed Anger Superiority Effect (ASE), the faster detection of angry than happy expressions, and conceal a true Happiness Superiority Effect (HSE). In Experiment 1, we applied these recommendations (for the first time) to visual search among schematic faces that previously had consistently yielded a robust ASE. Contrary to the prevailing literature, but consistent with D.V. Becker et al. (2011), we observed a HSE with schematic faces. The HSE with schematic faces was replicated in Experiments 2 and 3 u...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Past literature has indicated that face inversion either attenuates emotion detection advantages in ...
Horstmann G, Becker SI, Bergmann S, Burghaus L. A reversal of the search asymmetry favouring negativ...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
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...
Search asymmetries exist in visual search tasks and categorisation tasks for angry and happy faces, ...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
Horstmann G, Bauland A. Search asymmetries with real faces: Testing the anger-superiority effect. EM...
The anger-superiority hypothesis states that angry faces are detected more efficiently than friendly...
AbstractPrevious research indicates angry expressions are detected faster than happy ones, but most ...
Several different explanations have been proposed to account for the search asymmetry (SA) for angry...
Previous research has suggested that in crowds of faces angry faces are detected fastest, whereas, o...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Past literature has indicated that face inversion either attenuates emotion detection advantages in ...
Horstmann G, Becker SI, Bergmann S, Burghaus L. A reversal of the search asymmetry favouring negativ...
Recently, D.V. Becker, Anderson, Mortensen, Neufeld, and Neel (2011) proposed recommendations to avo...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
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...
Search asymmetries exist in visual search tasks and categorisation tasks for angry and happy faces, ...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
Horstmann G, Bauland A. Search asymmetries with real faces: Testing the anger-superiority effect. EM...
The anger-superiority hypothesis states that angry faces are detected more efficiently than friendly...
AbstractPrevious research indicates angry expressions are detected faster than happy ones, but most ...
Several different explanations have been proposed to account for the search asymmetry (SA) for angry...
Previous research has suggested that in crowds of faces angry faces are detected fastest, whereas, o...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Past literature has indicated that face inversion either attenuates emotion detection advantages in ...
Horstmann G, Becker SI, Bergmann S, Burghaus L. A reversal of the search asymmetry favouring negativ...