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A list of all the posts and pages found on the site. For you robots out there is an XML version available for digesting as well.
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Published:
title: ‘Negative and Positive Bias for Emotional Faces: Evidence from the Attention and Working Memory Paradigms.’ date: 2021-05-28 permalink: https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/8851066 citation: Xu, Q., Ye, C., Gu, S., Lei, Y., Li, X., Huang, L., & Liu, Q. (2020). Negative and Positive Bias for Emotional Faces: Evidence from the Attention and Working Memory Paradigms. Neural Plasticity, 2021, 8851066.
Published:
This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.
Published:
This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.
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This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.
Published:
This is a sample blog post. Lorem ipsum I can’t remember the rest of lorem ipsum and don’t have an internet connection right now. Testing testing testing this blog post. Blog posts are cool.
Published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2018
In this paper, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to record automatic brain responses to happy and sad faces in dysphoric and control participants. Stimuli were presented in a passive oddball condition, which allowed potential negative bias in dysphoria at different stages of face processing (M100, M170, and M300) and alterations of change detection (visual mismatch negativity, vMMN) to be investigated. The magnetic counterpart of the vMMN was elicited at all stages of face processing, indexing automatic deviance detection in facial emotions. The M170 amplitude was modulated by emotion, response amplitudes being larger for sad faces than happy faces. Group differences were found for the M300, and they were indexed by two different interaction effects. At the left occipital region of interest, the dysphoric group had larger amplitudes for sad than happy deviant faces, reflecting negative bias in deviance detection, which was not found in the control group. On the other hand, the dysphoric group showed no vMMN to changes in facial emotions, while the vMMN was observed in the control group at the right occipital region of interest. Our results indicate that there is a negative bias in automatic visual deviance detection, but also a general change detection deficit in dysphoria.
Published in Biological Psychology, 2018
In this paper, an event-related potential called contralateral delay activity (CDA) was applied to measure the filtering efficiency of happy, angry and neutral faces from visual working memory (VWM). The results showed that VWM capacity affected filtering of emotional faces during a VWM task. Individuals with high capacity were not distracted by emotional facial distractors. In contrast, the low-capacity group failed in filtering the neutral and angry face distractors, while the filtering was efficient for the happy face distractors. The results indicate that potentially threatening faces are particularly difficult to filter if VWM capacity is limited.
Published in Acta physiologica Sinica, 2019
In this paper, the behavioral and neuroscience studies of anger and happiness superiority effects are reviewed.By comparatively integrating the previous published results, we highlight that the future studies should further control the experimental materials and procedures, and investigate the processing mechanism of anger and happiness superiority effects by combining cognitive neurobiology means to resolve the disputes (in Chinese with English abstract).
Published in Journal 1, 2020
In this paper, we tested whether task-irrelevant sad and fearful faces are differently stored by dysphoric (elevated amount of depressive symptoms) and control participants who performed a visual working memory (VWM) task related to objects’ colors. We found that even if the groups differ neither in their VWM capacity, nor behavioral distractibility, they differed in filtering ability as indexed by the contralateral delay activity, a specific index for the maintenance phase of the VWM. Control participants unnecessarily stored fearful faces in memory, but they were able to filter sad faces, suggesting that specifically threatening faces are difficult to filter from VWM in healthy individuals. Dysphoric participants filtered both fearful and sad face distractors efficiently. Thus, depression-related attentional bias toward sad faces, if existing here, seems not to result in unnecessary storage of sad faces. Our results suggest a threat-related filtering difficulty and unexpected lack of this difficulty in negative face filtering in participants with depression symptoms.
Published in Scientific Reports, 2021
In this paper, we explored individual differences in the magnitudes of object- and dimension-based retrocue benefit (RCB) and their relationships with visual working memory (VWM) capacity. We confirmed that both object- and dimension-based retrocues could improve VWM performance. We also found a significant positive correlation between the magnitudes of object- and dimension-based RCB indexes, suggesting a partly overlapping mechanism between the use of object- and dimension-based retrocues. However, our results provided no evidence for a correlation between VWM capacity and the magnitudes of the object- or dimension-based RCBs. Although inadequate attention control is usually assumed to be associated with VWM capacity, the results suggest that the internal attention mechanism for using retrocues in VWM retention is independent of VWM capacity.
Published in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2021
In this paper, we investigated how the brain responds to unpredictable and predictable rare events. Magnetoencephalography responses were measured in adults frequently presented with somatosensory stimuli (FRE) that were occasionally replaced by two consecutively presented rare stimuli [unpredictable rare stimulus (UR) and predictable rare stimulus (PR)].The results linked the early component M55, but not M150 to prediction error signals. Our findings highlight the need for disentangling prediction error and rareness-related effects in future studies investigating prediction error signals.
Published in Neural Plasticity, 2021
In this paper, we compare previous controversial results from behavioral and neuroscience studies using Change Detection and Visual Search paradigms. We suggest three possible contributing factors that have significant impacts on the contradictory conclusions regarding different emotional bias effects; these factors are stimulus choice, experimental setting, and cognitive process. We also propose new research directions and guidelines for future studies.
Published in European Journal of Pain, 2023
In this paper, we found that lab-induced pain can alter both featural (reflected by P1) and structural face-sensitive (reflected by N170) visual encoding responses of emotional faces, even when the faces are irrelevant to the task.