نتایج جستجو برای: angry memories

تعداد نتایج: 23496  

2012
Dominik Mischkowski Ethan Kross Brad J. Bushman

People tend to ruminate after being provoked, which is like using gasoline to put out a fire—it feeds the flame by keeping aggressive thoughts and angry feelings active. In contrast, reflecting over past provocations from a self-distanced or “fly on the wall” perspective reduces aggressive thoughts and angry feelings. However, it is unclear whether people can self-distance “in the heat of the m...

Journal: :Journal of abnormal psychology 2006
Jutta Joormann Ian H Gotlib

The present study was designed to examine the operation of depression-specific biases in the identification or labeling of facial expression of emotions. Participants diagnosed with major depression and social phobia and control participants were presented with faces that expressed increasing degrees of emotional intensity, slowly changing from a neutral to a full-intensity happy, sad, or angry...

2017
Jinxiao Zhang Antoni B. Chan Esther E. y. Lau Janet Hui-wen Hsiao

Insomniacs were found to have compromised perception of facial expressions. Through eye movement examinations, here we test the hypothesis that this effect is due to impaired visual attention functions for retrieving diagnostic features in facial expression judgments. 23 individuals with insomnia symptoms and 23 non-insomniac controls completed a task to categorize happy, sad, fearful, and angr...

2016
Daniel A. Harris Vivian M. Ciaramitaro

While some models of how various attributes of a face are processed have posited that face features, invariant physical cues such as gender or ethnicity as well as variant social cues such as emotion, may be processed independently (e.g., Bruce and Young, 1986), other models suggest a more distributed representation and interdependent processing (e.g., Haxby et al., 2000). Here, we use a contin...

Journal: :Psychonomic bulletin & review 2007
Sowon Hahn Scott D Gronlund

Using a visual search paradigm, we investigated how a top-down goal modified attentional bias for threatening facial expressions. In two experiments, participants searched for a facial expression either based on stimulus characteristics or a top-down goal. In Experiment 1 participants searched for a discrepant facial expression in a homogenous crowd of faces. Consistent with previous research, ...

2013
Rikio Ueno Mitsunori Mizumachi Yoshihisa Nakatoh

Speech recognition has been introduced as an interface for the various devices; especially operator assistance in call center operations is needed. But when speech recognition is introduced into the call center operations, the recognition performance may deteriorate because the voices of customers include emotion (angry). Previous study reported that the recognition performance of “angry voice”...

Journal: :Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry 2011
Wolf-Gero Lange Kathrin Heuer Oliver Langner Ger P J Keijsers Eni S Becker Mike Rinck

Scientific evidence is equivocal on whether Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) is characterized by a biased negative evaluation of (grouped) facial expressions, even though it is assumed that such a bias plays a crucial role in the maintenance of the disorder. To shed light on the underlying mechanisms of face evaluation in social anxiety, the eye movements of 22 highly socially anxious (SAs) and 21...

Journal: :Psychological medicine 2009
E M Mueller S G Hofmann D L Santesso A E Meuret S Bitran D A Pizzagalli

BACKGROUND Previous studies investigating attentional biases in social anxiety disorder (SAD) have yielded mixed results. Recent event-related potential (ERP) studies using the dot-probe paradigm in non-anxious participants have shown that the P1 component is sensitive to visuospatial attention towards emotional faces. We used a dot-probe task in conjunction with high-density ERPs and source lo...

Journal: :Social cognitive and affective neuroscience 2006
Tricia Striano Franziska Kopp Tobias Grossmann Vincent M Reid

Eye gaze is a fundamental component of human communication. During the first post-natal year, infants rapidly learn that the gaze of others provides socially significant information. In addition, infants are sensitive to several emotional expressions. However, little is known regarding how eye contact influences the way the infant brain processes emotional expressions. We measured 4-month-old i...

2007
Iris-Tatjana Kolassa Stephan Kolassa Frauke Musial Wolfgang H. R. Miltner Friedrich Schiller

Social phobia has been associated with an attentional bias for angry faces. This study aimed at further characterising this attentional bias by investigating reaction times, heart rates, and ERPs while social phobics, spider phobics, and controls identified either the colour or the emotional quality of angry, happy, or neutral schematic faces. The emotional expression of angry faces did not int...

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