نتایج جستجو برای: emotional words

تعداد نتایج: 245686  

Journal: :NeuroImage 2004
Stephanie Ortigue Christoph M Michel Micah M Murray Christine Mohr Serge Carbonnel Theodor Landis

Functional electrical neuroimaging investigated incidental emotional word processing. Previous research suggests that the brain may differentially respond to the emotional content of linguistic stimuli pre-lexically (i.e., before distinguishing that these stimuli are words). We investigated the spatiotemporal brain mechanisms of this apparent paradox and in particular whether the initial differ...

Journal: :Neuroreport 2006
Lars Kuchinke Arthur M Jacobs Melissa L-H Võ Markus Conrad Claudia Grubich Manfred Herrmann

We employed event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine emotional valence effects on verbal recognition memory. Using a yes/no recognition task, we focussed on prefrontal cortex responses to positive, negative and neutral words. Behavioral data confirmed enhanced processing of emotional items and functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed different subregions in the prefr...

2014
Francesca M.M. Citron Marcus A. Gray Hugo D. Critchley Brendan S. Weekes Evelyn C. Ferstl

A growing body of literature shows that the emotional content of verbal material affects reading, wherein emotional words are given processing priority compared to neutral words. Human emotions can be conceptualised within a two-dimensional model comprised of emotional valence and arousal (intensity). These variables are at least in part distinct, but recent studies report interactive effects d...

2014
Doug Hyun Han Hee Jeong Yoo Bung Nyun Kim William McMahon Perry F. Renshaw

Studies of social dysfunction in patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have generally focused on the perception of emotional words and facial affect. Brain imaging studies have suggested that the fusiform gyrus is associated with both the comprehension of language and face recognition. We hypothesized that patients with ASD would have decreased ability to recognize affect via emotional w...

Journal: :Neuropsychologia 2016
Vicky T Lai Falk Huettig

Research on prediction in language processing has focused predominantly on the function of predictive context and less on the potential contribution of the predicted word. The present study investigated how meaning that is not immediately prominent in the contents of predictions but is part of the predicted words influences sentence processing. We used emotional meaning to address this question...

Journal: :Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior 2017
Martin Wegrzyn Cornelia Herbert Thomas Ethofer Tobias Flaisch Johanna Kissler

Visually presented emotional words are processed preferentially and effects of emotional content are similar to those of explicit attention deployment in that both amplify visual processing. However, auditory processing of emotional words is less well characterized and interactions between emotional content and task-induced attention have not been fully understood. Here, we investigate auditory...

Journal: :NeuroImage 2005
Lars Kuchinke Arthur M Jacobs Claudia Grubich Melissa L-H Võ Markus Conrad Manfred Herrmann

The present study aimed at identifying the neural responses associated with the incidental processing of the emotional valence of single words using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Twenty right-handed participants performed a visual lexical decision task, discriminating between nouns and orthographically and phonologically legal nonwords. Positive, neutral and negati...

2015
Yueh-Lin Tsai Chi-Lin Yu Yong-Ru Hsiao Shu-Ling Cho Hsueh-Chih Chen Jon-Fan Hu

Previous studies have investigated the differences between concrete concepts and abstract concepts. Nevertheless there’s still no research probing emotional words to that font. The concepts behind emotional words have both affective and cognitive components, hence emotional concepts might have unique pattern of semantic properties. The present study then strives to compare the semantic properti...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2003
Larry Cahill

C oncerning emotion’s influence on memory, the psychologist Henri Piéron observed that ‘‘a violent emotion may reinforce memory, and give rise to indelible associations’’ (1). Our common experience (typically with emotions less intense) also tells us that emotional events tend to be well remembered, and extensive scientific evidence confirms anecdotal observations that emotional arousal can str...

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