Sad individuals perform more accurately at face identity recognition (Hills, Werno, & Lewis, 2011), possibly because they scan more of the face during encoding. During expression identification tasks, sad individuals do not fixate on the eyes as much as happier individuals (Wu, Pu, Allen, & Pauli, 2012). Fixating on features other than the eyes leads to a reduced own-ethnicity bias (Hills & Lewis, 2006). This background indicates that sad individuals would not view the eyes as much as happy individuals and this would result in improved expression recognition and a reduced own-ethnicity bias. This prediction was tested using an expression identification task, with eye tracking. We demonstrate that sad-induced participants show enhanced expre...
Research has shown that neutral faces are better recognized when they had been presented with happy ...
AbstractWe used a happy/sad classification task and a psychophysical model to study the tuning prope...
Evidence that affective factors (e.g. anxiety, depression, affect) are significantly related to indi...
Sad people recognize faces more accurately than happy people (Hills et al., 2011). We devised four h...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
Individuals vary in perceptual accuracy when categorising facial expressions, yet it is unclear how...
It is known that happy faces create more robust identity recognition memory than faces with some oth...
It is known that happy faces create more robust identity recognition memory than faces with some oth...
It is well known that memory can be modulated by emotional stimuli at the time of encoding and conso...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
We investigated the influence of happy and angry expressions on memory for new faces. Participants w...
Previous studies indicate that the encoding of new facial identities in memory is influenced by the ...
Research has shown that neutral faces are better recognized when they had been presented with happy ...
AbstractWe used a happy/sad classification task and a psychophysical model to study the tuning prope...
Evidence that affective factors (e.g. anxiety, depression, affect) are significantly related to indi...
Sad people recognize faces more accurately than happy people (Hills et al., 2011). We devised four h...
Mood has varied effects on cognitive performance including the accuracy of face recognition (Lundh &...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
Mood affects memory and social judgments. However, findings are inconsistent with regard to how mood...
Individuals vary in perceptual accuracy when categorising facial expressions, yet it is unclear how...
It is known that happy faces create more robust identity recognition memory than faces with some oth...
It is known that happy faces create more robust identity recognition memory than faces with some oth...
It is well known that memory can be modulated by emotional stimuli at the time of encoding and conso...
Depressed people tend to avoid eye-contact in social situations and in experimental settings, wherea...
There is some evidence that faces with a happy expression are recognized better than faces with othe...
We investigated the influence of happy and angry expressions on memory for new faces. Participants w...
Previous studies indicate that the encoding of new facial identities in memory is influenced by the ...
Research has shown that neutral faces are better recognized when they had been presented with happy ...
AbstractWe used a happy/sad classification task and a psychophysical model to study the tuning prope...
Evidence that affective factors (e.g. anxiety, depression, affect) are significantly related to indi...