Sad people recognize faces more accurately than happy people (Hills et al., 2011). We devised four hypotheses for this finding that are tested between in the current study. The four hypotheses are: (1) sad people engage in more expert processing associated with face processing; (2) sad people are motivated to be more accurate than happy people in an attempt to repair their mood; (3) sad people have a defocused attentional strategy that allows more information about a face to be encoded; and (4) sad people scan more of the face than happy people leading to more facial features to be encoded. In Experiment 1, we found that dysphoria (sad mood often associated with depression) was not correlated with the face-inversion effect (a measure of exp...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
A negative mood-congruent attention bias has been consistently observed, for example, in clinical st...
Faces are the most commonly used stimuli to study emotions. Researchers often manipulate the emotion...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
Sad individuals perform more accurately at face identity recognition (Hills, Werno, & Lewis, 2011), ...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
This study examined the association between trait depression and information-processing biases. Thir...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Objective: Cognitive theories suggest people with depression interpret self-referential social infor...
The aim of the present study was to establish if patients with major depression (MD) exhibit a memor...
The study aimed to determine if the memory bias for negative faces previously demonstrated in depres...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
Emotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of psychologi...
Previous studies have suggested that negatively valenced faces (e.g., angry faces) automatically cap...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
A negative mood-congruent attention bias has been consistently observed, for example, in clinical st...
Faces are the most commonly used stimuli to study emotions. Researchers often manipulate the emotion...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
Sad individuals perform more accurately at face identity recognition (Hills, Werno, & Lewis, 2011), ...
The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
This study examined the association between trait depression and information-processing biases. Thir...
AbstractEmotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of ps...
Objective: Cognitive theories suggest people with depression interpret self-referential social infor...
The aim of the present study was to establish if patients with major depression (MD) exhibit a memor...
The study aimed to determine if the memory bias for negative faces previously demonstrated in depres...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
Emotion biases feature prominently in cognitive theories of depression and are a focus of psychologi...
Previous studies have suggested that negatively valenced faces (e.g., angry faces) automatically cap...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
A negative mood-congruent attention bias has been consistently observed, for example, in clinical st...
Faces are the most commonly used stimuli to study emotions. Researchers often manipulate the emotion...