Emotion processing involves specialised brain regions allowing for effective evaluation of the social environment and for the acquisition of social skills that emerge over childhood. In humans, an important aspect of normal development is the ability to understand the facial expressions of others that signal the nature and safety of the environment. Existing functional data, however, have not characterised the developmental trajectories associated with the differing neural and cognitive-behavioural development. The current thesis investigates the functional specialisation and development of the spatial and temporal patterns in neural activities during implicit processing of facial emotions from early childhood through adulthood. The fir...
Contains fulltext : 99791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The present stud...
Our facial expressions give others the opportunity to access our feelings, and constitute an importa...
Facial emotion perception is fundamental to human social behaviour, and changes with age. Neverthele...
Emotion processing involves specialised brain regions allowing for effective evaluation of the socia...
& Several lines of evidence implicate the amygdala in face– emotion processing, particularly for...
Immature cognition is susceptible to interference from competing information, and particularly in af...
Emotion recognition is essential for social interaction and communication and is a capacity in which...
In the context of chronic childhood emotional maltreatment (CEM; emotional abuse and/or neglect), ad...
Brain maturation is an important factor in cognitive, emotional, behavioural and motor development d...
The processing of emotional facial expressions is underpinned by the integration of information from...
Understanding of emotions has been shown to develop between the ages of 4 and 10 years; however, ind...
The ability to properly distinguish facial emotions has a protracted development, not maturing until...
Several lines of evidence implicate the amygdala in face-emotion processing, particularly for fearfu...
Although empathy is rooted early in life, the ability to understand and share the emotions of others...
Facial emotion perception is fundamental to human social behaviour, and changes with age. Neverthele...
Contains fulltext : 99791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The present stud...
Our facial expressions give others the opportunity to access our feelings, and constitute an importa...
Facial emotion perception is fundamental to human social behaviour, and changes with age. Neverthele...
Emotion processing involves specialised brain regions allowing for effective evaluation of the socia...
& Several lines of evidence implicate the amygdala in face– emotion processing, particularly for...
Immature cognition is susceptible to interference from competing information, and particularly in af...
Emotion recognition is essential for social interaction and communication and is a capacity in which...
In the context of chronic childhood emotional maltreatment (CEM; emotional abuse and/or neglect), ad...
Brain maturation is an important factor in cognitive, emotional, behavioural and motor development d...
The processing of emotional facial expressions is underpinned by the integration of information from...
Understanding of emotions has been shown to develop between the ages of 4 and 10 years; however, ind...
The ability to properly distinguish facial emotions has a protracted development, not maturing until...
Several lines of evidence implicate the amygdala in face-emotion processing, particularly for fearfu...
Although empathy is rooted early in life, the ability to understand and share the emotions of others...
Facial emotion perception is fundamental to human social behaviour, and changes with age. Neverthele...
Contains fulltext : 99791.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The present stud...
Our facial expressions give others the opportunity to access our feelings, and constitute an importa...
Facial emotion perception is fundamental to human social behaviour, and changes with age. Neverthele...