May I have your attention, please: Electrocortical responses to positive and negative stimuli
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] John T Cacioppo,et al. Learning Where to Look for Danger: Integrating Affective and Spatial Information , 2002, Psychological science.
[2] K. Vohs,et al. Case Western Reserve University , 1990 .
[3] Francisco Mercado,et al. Emotion and Attention Interaction Studied through Event-Related Potentials , 2001, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[4] A. Ohman,et al. The face in the crowd revisited: a threat advantage with schematic stimuli. , 2001, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[5] S. Mineka,et al. Fears, phobias, and preparedness: toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning. , 2001, Psychological review.
[6] A. Tversky,et al. Choices, Values, and Frames , 2000 .
[7] R. Dolan,et al. Common effects of emotional valence, arousal and attention on neural activation during visual processing of pictures , 1999, Neuropsychologia.
[8] D L Schacter,et al. Visual word stem completion priming within and across modalities: a PET study. , 1999, Neuroreport.
[9] J. Cacioppo,et al. The affect system has parallel and integrative processing components: Form follows function. , 1999 .
[10] S. Chaiken,et al. Personality and Social Psychology Bulle- Tin Chen, Bargh / Consequences of Automatic Evaluation Immediate Behavioral Predispositions to Approach or Avoid the Stimulus , 2022 .
[11] Lawrence M. Ward,et al. An event-related brain potential study of inhibition of return , 1999, Perception & psychophysics.
[12] J. Jackson,et al. Evolution and Dissolution of the Nervous System , 1998 .
[13] Jeff T. Larsen,et al. Negative information weighs more heavily on the brain: the negativity bias in evaluative categorizations. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[14] Peter J. Lang,et al. Eliciting Affect Using the International Affective Picture System: Trajectories through Evaluative Space , 1998 .
[15] R. Dolan,et al. Conscious and unconscious emotional learning in the human amygdala , 1998, Nature.
[16] G.J.M. van Boxtel,et al. Computational and statistical methods for analyzing event-related potential data , 1998 .
[17] M. Bradley,et al. Neuroanatomical correlates of pleasant and unpleasant emotion , 1997, Neuropsychologia.
[18] M. Dawson,et al. The varying time courses of attentional and affective modulation of the startle eyeblink reflex. , 1996, Psychophysiology.
[19] S. Hillyard,et al. Spatial Selective Attention Affects Early Extrastriate But Not Striate Components of the Visual Evoked Potential , 1996, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[20] J. Cacioppo,et al. Bioelectrical echoes from evaluative categorization: II. A late positive brain potential that varies as a function of attitude registration rather than attitude report. , 1995, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[21] P. Lang. International Affective Picture System (IAPS) : Technical Manual and Affective Ratings , 1995 .
[22] Joseph E LeDoux. Emotion: clues from the brain. , 1995, Annual review of psychology.
[23] A. Ohman,et al. "Unconscious anxiety": phobic responses to masked stimuli. , 1994, Journal of abnormal psychology.
[24] Kevin J. Hawley,et al. Perceptual inhibition of expected inputs: The key that opens closed minds , 1994, Psychonomic bulletin & review.
[25] Robert Thompson,et al. Brain Mechanisms: Papers in Memory of Robert Thompson , 1993 .
[26] J. Cacioppo,et al. Neurobehavioral Organization and the Cardinal Principle of Evaluative Bivalence a , 1993, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
[27] John T. Cacioppo,et al. If Attitudes Affect How Stimuli Are Processed, Should They Not Affect the Event-Related Brain Potential? , 1993 .
[28] R. Fazio,et al. On the orienting value of attitudes: attitude accessibility as a determinant of an object's attraction of visual attention. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[29] S. Chaiken,et al. The generality of the automatic attitude activation effect. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[30] O. John,et al. Automatic vigilance: the attention-grabbing power of negative social information. , 1991, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[31] Shelley E. Taylor,et al. Asymmetrical effects of positive and negative events: the mobilization-minimization hypothesis. , 1991, Psychological bulletin.
[32] Joseph E LeDoux,et al. Indelibility of Subcortical Emotional Memories , 1989, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.
[33] C. H. Hansen,et al. Finding the face in the crowd: an anger superiority effect. , 1988, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[34] H. Semlitsch,et al. A solution for reliable and valid reduction of ocular artifacts, applied to the P300 ERP. , 1986, Psychophysiology.
[35] Felicia Pratto,et al. Individual construct accessibility and perceptual selection , 1986 .
[36] R. Zajonc. Feeling and thinking : Preferences need no inferences , 1980 .
[37] D. Smothergill,et al. A two-factor theory of stimulus-repetition effects. , 1978, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.
[38] E. Donchin. Multivariate analysis of event-related potential data: A tutorial review , 1978 .
[39] W. S. Rholes,et al. Category accessibility and impression formation , 1977 .
[40] R. E. Warren,et al. Stimulus encoding and memory. , 1972 .
[41] N. Anderson. Averaging versus adding as a stimulus-combination rule in impression formation. , 1965, Journal of experimental psychology.
[42] N. Anderson. PRIMACY EFFECTS IN PERSONALITY IMPRESSION FORMATION USING A GENERALIZED ORDER EFFECT PARADIGM. , 1965, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[43] John W. Scott,et al. Selected Writings of John Hughlings Jackson , 1959 .
[44] E. Miller. Handbook of Social Psychology , 1946, Mental Health.
[45] S. Fiske,et al. The Handbook of Social Psychology , 1935 .