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      Individuation Motivation and Face Experience Can Operate Jointly to Produce the Own-Race Bias

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      Social Psychological and Personality Science
      SAGE Publications

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          Most cited references32

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          Recognizing emotion from facial expressions: psychological and neurological mechanisms.

          Recognizing emotion from facial expressions draws on diverse psychological processes implemented in a large array of neural structures. Studies using evoked potentials, lesions, and functional imaging have begun to elucidate some of the mechanisms. Early perceptual processing of faces draws on cortices in occipital and temporal lobes that construct detailed representations from the configuration of facial features. Subsequent recognition requires a set of structures, including amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex, that links perceptual representations of the face to the generation of knowledge about the emotion signaled, a complex set of mechanisms using multiple strategies. Although recent studies have provided a wealth of detail regarding these mechanisms in the adult human brain, investigations are also being extended to nonhuman primates, to infants, and to patients with psychiatric disorders.
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            Thirty years of investigating the own-race bias in memory for faces: A meta-analytic review.

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              The face in the crowd revisited: a threat advantage with schematic stimuli.

              Schematic threatening, friendly, and neutral faces were used to test the hypothesis that humans preferentially orient their attention toward threat. Using a visual search paradigm, participants searched for discrepant faces in matrices of otherwise identical faces. Across 5 experiments, results consistently showed faster and more accurate detection of threatening than friendly targets. The threat advantage was obvious regardless of whether the conditions favored parallel or serial search (i.e., involved neutral or emotional distractors), and it was valid for inverted faces. Threatening angry faces were more quickly and accurately detected than were other negative faces (sad or "scheming"), which suggests that the threat advantage can be attributed to threat rather than to the negative valence or the uniqueness of the target display.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Social Psychological and Personality Science
                Social Psychological and Personality Science
                SAGE Publications
                1948-5506
                1948-5514
                December 02 2011
                May 31 2011
                : 3
                : 1
                : 80-87
                Article
                10.1177/1948550611409759
                adaac20a-15e2-4a54-bf2b-d233f837234e
                © 2011
                History

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