Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing synchronous stimuli on the face of another individual induces "enfacement," i.e., the subjective illusory experience of ownership of the other's face (explicit measure) and the attribution of the others' facial features to one's own face (implicit measure). Here we expanded previous knowledge by investigating if the tendency to include the other into one's own representation is influenced by positive or negative interpersonal attitudes derived either from consolidated socio-cultural stereotypes or from newly acquired, short-term individual interactions with a specific person. To this aim, we tested in Caucasian white participants the enfacement with a white and a black confederate, before...
Self-face representation is fundamentally important for self-identity and self-consciousness. Given ...
This work builds on the enfacement effect. This effect occurs when experiencing a rhythmic stimulati...
One's own face and gaze are never seen directly but only in a mirror. Yet, these stimuli capture att...
Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing synchronous stimuli on the face of another indi...
gmail.com Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing synchronous stimuli on the face of an...
Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing similar synchronous stimuli on the face of anot...
It has been well demonstrated that shared multisensory experiences between the self and others can i...
When observers’ own face is stroked in synchrony, but not in asynchrony with another face, they tend...
People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptio...
Recent studies have shown that the well-known effect of multisensory stimulation on body-awareness c...
This study investigated whether multisensory stimulation with other-race faces can reduce racial pre...
People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptio...
Being fundamental to higher forms of consciousness and in preserving identity over time, self-face r...
One's own face is a key distinctive feature of our physical appearance, yet multisensory visuo-tacti...
Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental representa...
Self-face representation is fundamentally important for self-identity and self-consciousness. Given ...
This work builds on the enfacement effect. This effect occurs when experiencing a rhythmic stimulati...
One's own face and gaze are never seen directly but only in a mirror. Yet, these stimuli capture att...
Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing synchronous stimuli on the face of another indi...
gmail.com Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing synchronous stimuli on the face of an...
Experiencing tactile facial stimulation while seeing similar synchronous stimuli on the face of anot...
It has been well demonstrated that shared multisensory experiences between the self and others can i...
When observers’ own face is stroked in synchrony, but not in asynchrony with another face, they tend...
People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptio...
Recent studies have shown that the well-known effect of multisensory stimulation on body-awareness c...
This study investigated whether multisensory stimulation with other-race faces can reduce racial pre...
People tend to evaluate their own traits and abilities favourably and such favourable self-perceptio...
Being fundamental to higher forms of consciousness and in preserving identity over time, self-face r...
One's own face is a key distinctive feature of our physical appearance, yet multisensory visuo-tacti...
Enfacement is an illusion wherein synchronous visual and tactile inputs update the mental representa...
Self-face representation is fundamentally important for self-identity and self-consciousness. Given ...
This work builds on the enfacement effect. This effect occurs when experiencing a rhythmic stimulati...
One's own face and gaze are never seen directly but only in a mirror. Yet, these stimuli capture att...