نتایج جستجو برای: memory for faces

تعداد نتایج: 10448818  

Journal: :Neuropsychologia 2011
Grit Herzmann Verena Willenbockel James W Tanaka Tim Curran

People are generally better at recognizing faces from their own race than from a different race, as has been shown in numerous behavioral studies. Here we use event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate how differences between own-race and other-race faces influence the neural correlates of memory encoding and recognition. ERPs of Asian and Caucasian participants were recorded during the stu...

Journal: :Cognition & emotion 2012
Satoshi F Nakashima Stephen R H Langton Sakiko Yoshikawa

We report data from an experiment that investigated the influence of gaze direction and facial expression on face memory. Participants were shown a set of unfamiliar faces with either happy or angry facial expressions, which were either gazing straight ahead or had their gaze averted to one side. Memory for faces that were initially shown with angry expressions was found to be poorer when these...

Journal: :Emotion 2009
Natalie C Ebner Marcia K Johnson

Studies have found that older compared with young adults are less able to identify facial expressions and have worse memory for negative than for positive faces, but those studies have used only young faces. Studies finding that both age groups are more accurate at recognizing faces of their own than other ages have used mostly neutral faces. Thus, age differences in processing faces may not ex...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2006
Joel L Voss Ken A Paller

Implicit memory and explicit memory are fundamentally different manifestations of memory storage in the brain. Yet, conceptual fluency driven by previous experience could theoretically be responsible for both conceptual implicit memory and aspects of explicit memory. For example, contemplating the meaning of a word might serve to speed subsequent processing of that word and also make it seem fa...

Journal: :Memory & cognition 2007
Yuko Yotsumoto Michael J Kahana Hugh R Wilson Robert Sekuler

A series of experiments examined short-term recognition memory for trios of briefly presented, synthetic human faces derived from three real human faces. The stimuli were a graded series of faces, which differed by varying known amounts from the face of the average female. Faces based on each of the three real faces were transformed so as to lie along orthogonal axes in a 3-D face space. Experi...

Journal: :Behaviour research and therapy 2009
Nathan Ridout Aliya Noreen Jaskaran Johal

UNLABELLED The aim was to establish if the memory bias for sad faces, reported in clinically depressed patients (Gilboa-Schechtman, Erhard Weiss, & Jeczemien, 2002; Ridout, Astell, Reid, Glen, & O'Carroll, 2003) generalizes to sub-clinical depression (dysphoria) and experimentally induced sadness. Study 1: dysphoric (n=24) and non-dysphoric (n=20) participants were presented with facial stimuli...

2013
Charlotte Pinabiaux Lucie Hertz-Pannier Catherine Chiron Sébastian Rodrigo Isabelle Jambaqué Marion Noulhiane

Enhanced memory for emotional faces is a significant component of adaptive social interactions, but little is known on its neural developmental correlates. We explored the role of amygdaloid complex (AC) and medial temporal lobe (MTL) in emotional memory recognition across development, by comparing fMRI activations of successful memory encoding of fearful and neutral faces in children (n = 12; ...

2011
Heather D. Lucas Joan Y. Chiao Ken A. Paller

Memory is often less accurate for faces from another racial group than for faces from one's own racial group. The mechanisms underlying this phenomenon are a topic of active debate. Contemporary theories invoke factors such as inferior expertise with faces from other racial groups and an encoding emphasis on race-specifying information. We investigated neural mechanisms of this memory bias by r...

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