The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processing of emotional facial expressions. According to the threat hypothesis, processing of angry faces is prioritized by the human cognitive system, because rapid detection of threat has a large adaptive value. The negativity hypothesis presumes that distressing emotional experiences of other people attract attention, regardless of whether they represent danger or not. The emotionality hypothesis proposes that positive emotional facial expressions can capture attention as effective as negative ones, while the happy face superiority hypothesis predicts that happy faces are prioritized. In the present study, which was conducted on 24 participants, ch...
We look at the things that matter to us. We may rest our eyes on things that attract us, stare at so...
With the face-in-the-crowd task, a visual search paradigm, it was shown that searching for an angry ...
Faces are considered as important stimuli in neuroscience research. Indeed, many studies have brough...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
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...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
Using a visual search paradigm, this series of experiments determined whether threatening and nonthr...
Threats can derive from our physical or social surroundings and bias the way we perceive and interpr...
Research suggests that the human attentional system is biased towards emotional events in the enviro...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of valence in facial cues and object t...
In the literature, a well-known processing advantage for angry schematic faces was largely observed ...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
We look at the things that matter to us. We may rest our eyes on things that attract us, stare at so...
With the face-in-the-crowd task, a visual search paradigm, it was shown that searching for an angry ...
Faces are considered as important stimuli in neuroscience research. Indeed, many studies have brough...
The aim of the present study was to investigate which affective component guides cognitive processin...
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...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
Using a visual search paradigm, this series of experiments determined whether threatening and nonthr...
Threats can derive from our physical or social surroundings and bias the way we perceive and interpr...
Research suggests that the human attentional system is biased towards emotional events in the enviro...
Three experiments examined the cultural relativity of emotion recognition using the visual search ta...
Prior reports of preferential detection of emotional expressions in visual search have yielded incon...
The goal of the present study was to characterize the effects of valence in facial cues and object t...
In the literature, a well-known processing advantage for angry schematic faces was largely observed ...
It is commonly assumed that a person’s emotional state can be readily inferred from his or her facia...
We look at the things that matter to us. We may rest our eyes on things that attract us, stare at so...
With the face-in-the-crowd task, a visual search paradigm, it was shown that searching for an angry ...
Faces are considered as important stimuli in neuroscience research. Indeed, many studies have brough...