Several studies have used a visual search task to demonstrate that schematic negative-face targets are found faster and/or more efficiently than positive ones, with these findings taken as evidence that negative emotional expression is capable of guiding attentional allocation in visual search A common hypothesis is that these effects should be disrupted by face inversion; however, this has not been consistently demonstrated, and raises the possibility of a perceptual confound One candidate confound is the feature of "closure" (see Wolfe & Horowitz, 2004) caused by the down-turned mouth adjacent to edge of the face This was investigated in the present series of experiments In Experiment 1, the speed advantage for upright negative faces was ...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Controversy surrounds the mechanisms underlying the pop-out effect for faces in visual search. Is th...
Horstmann G. Visual search for schematic affective faces: Stability and variability of search slopes...
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...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
The threat-advantage hypothesis that threatening or negative faces can be discriminated preattentive...
To test whether threatening visual information receives prioritized processing, many studies have ex...
It has been proposed that threatening stimuli can automatically attract attention and are detected f...
Several different explanations have been proposed to account for the search asymmetry (SA) for angry...
It has been suggested that certain facial expressions are subject to enhanced processing to maximize...
Recent findings demonstrated that negative emotional faces (sad, anger or fear) tend to attract atte...
Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) graphically depict multidimensional data by correlating features of ...
Horstmann G, Becker SI. Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? P...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Controversy surrounds the mechanisms underlying the pop-out effect for faces in visual search. Is th...
Horstmann G. Visual search for schematic affective faces: Stability and variability of search slopes...
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...
Recent studies of the face in the crowd effect, the faster detection of angry than of happy faces in...
The threat-advantage hypothesis that threatening or negative faces can be discriminated preattentive...
To test whether threatening visual information receives prioritized processing, many studies have ex...
It has been proposed that threatening stimuli can automatically attract attention and are detected f...
Several different explanations have been proposed to account for the search asymmetry (SA) for angry...
It has been suggested that certain facial expressions are subject to enhanced processing to maximize...
Recent findings demonstrated that negative emotional faces (sad, anger or fear) tend to attract atte...
Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) graphically depict multidimensional data by correlating features of ...
Horstmann G, Becker SI. Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? P...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Click on the DOI link below to access the article (may not be free).Chernoff faces (Chernoff, 1973) ...
Controversy surrounds the mechanisms underlying the pop-out effect for faces in visual search. Is th...