Time course and specificity of event-related potentials to emotional expressions
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Dietrich Lehmann,et al. Affective judgments of faces modulate early activity (approximately 160 ms) within the fusiform gyri. , 2002, NeuroImage.
[2] D. Jeffreys. A face-responsive potential recorded from the human scalp , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[3] D. Perrett,et al. Visual neurones responsive to faces in the monkey temporal cortex , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.
[4] M. Eimer,et al. The processing of emotional facial expression is gated by spatial attention: evidence from event-related brain potentials. , 2003, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[5] Andreas J Fallgatter,et al. Face-specific event-related potential in humans is independent from facial expression. , 2002, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.
[6] Dietrich Lehmann,et al. Affective Judgments of Faces Modulate Early Activity (∼160 ms) within the Fusiform Gyri , 2002, NeuroImage.
[7] Margot J. Taylor,et al. Inversion and Contrast Polarity Reversal Affect both Encoding and Recognition Processes of Unfamiliar Faces: A Repetition Study Using ERPs , 2002, NeuroImage.
[8] G. Pagnoni,et al. Explicit and Incidental Facial Expression Processing: An fMRI Study , 2001, NeuroImage.
[9] M. Eimer,et al. An ERP study on the time course of emotional face processing , 2002, Neuroreport.
[10] N. Sagiv,et al. Structural Encoding of Human and Schematic Faces: Holistic and Part-Based Processes , 2001, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[11] M. Tarr,et al. The N170 occipito‐temporal component is delayed and enhanced to inverted faces but not to inverted objects: an electrophysiological account of face‐specific processes in the human brain , 2000, Neuroreport.
[12] Tom Manly,et al. Facial expression recognition across the adult life span , 2003, Neuropsychologia.
[13] K. Luan Phan,et al. Functional Neuroanatomy of Emotion: A Meta-Analysis of Emotion Activation Studies in PET and fMRI , 2002, NeuroImage.
[14] A. Young,et al. Disgust implicated in obsessive–compulsive disorder , 1997, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[15] D. Perrett,et al. Loss of disgust. Perception of faces and emotions in Huntington's disease. , 1996, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[16] Karl J. Friston,et al. A neuromodulatory role for the human amygdala in processing emotional facial expressions. , 1998, Brain : a journal of neurology.
[17] P. Ekman. Pictures of Facial Affect , 1976 .
[18] P Krolak-Salmon,et al. Processing of facial emotional expression: spatio‐temporal data as assessed by scalp event‐related potentials , 2001, The European journal of neuroscience.
[19] Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al. Attentional control of the processing of neural and emotional stimuli. , 2002, Brain research. Cognitive brain research.
[20] M. Junghöfer,et al. Attention and emotion: an ERP analysis of facilitated emotional stimulus processing , 2003, Neuroreport.
[21] A. Young,et al. Impaired recognition and experience of disgust following brain injury , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.
[22] Robin M. Chan,et al. Age-related differences in brain activation during emotional face processing , 2003, Neurobiology of Aging.
[23] R. Dolan,et al. Effects of Attention and Emotion on Face Processing in the Human Brain An Event-Related fMRI Study , 2001, Neuron.
[24] A. Young,et al. Neural responses to facial and vocal expressions of fear and disgust , 1998, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.
[25] E. Halgren,et al. Human brain potentials related to the emotional expression, repetition, and gender of faces , 1998, Psychobiology.
[26] A. Vighetto,et al. An attention modulated response to disgust in human ventral anterior insula , 2003, Annals of neurology.