Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
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A review of neuroimaging studies of race-related prejudice: does amygdala response reflect threat?Can singular examples change implicit attitudes in the real-world?What Lies Beneath? Minority Group Members' Suspicion of Whites' Egalitarian Motivation Predicts Responses to Whites' Smiles.Probing Prejudice with Startle Eyeblink Modification: A Marker of Attention, Emotion, or Both?Following in the wake of anger: when not discriminating is discriminatingLooking the Other Way: The Role of Gaze Direction in the Cross-race Memory Effect.Right wing authoritarianism is associated with race bias in face detection.The automatic conservative: ideology-based attentional asymmetries in the processing of valenced informationImplicit racial attitudes influence perceived emotional intensity on other-race faces.Dangerous Enough: Moderating Racial Bias with Contextual Threat Cues.Culture but not gender modulates amygdala activation during explicit emotion recognitionNon-threatening other-race faces capture visual attention: evidence from a dot-probe task.Innocent until primed: mock jurors' racially biased response to the presumption of innocenceTemporal dynamics underlying the modulation of social status on social attention.Race Guides Attention in Visual SearchSocial Groups Prioritize Selective Attention to Faces: How Social Identity Shapes Distractor Interference.Enhanced Memory for both Threat and Neutral Information Under Conditions of Intergroup ThreatAmygdala sensitivity to race is not present in childhood but emerges over adolescenceWhy Police Kill Black Males with Impunity: Applying Public Health Critical Race Praxis (PHCRP) to Address the Determinants of Policing Behaviors and "Justifiable" Homicides in the USASocial Threat and Motor Resonance: When a Menacing Outgroup Delays Motor Response.Discrimination and Psychological Distress: Gender Differences among Arab Americans.Are eyewitness accounts biased? Evaluating false memories for crimes involving in-group or out-group conflict.The prevalence of discrimination across racial groups in contemporary America: Results from a nationally representative sample of adults.Anticipated Negative Police-Youth Encounters and Depressive Symptoms among Pregnant African American Women: A Brief Report.Putting race in context: social class modulates processing of race in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and amygdala.Rapid social perception is flexible: approach and avoidance motivational states shape P100 responses to other-race faces.Would an obese person whistle vivaldi? Targets of prejudice self-present to minimize appearance of specific threats.Social Vision: Functional Forecasting and the Integration of Compound Social Cues.Categorising intersectional targets: An "either/and" approach to race- and gender-emotion congruity.Of Kith and Kin: Perceptual Enrichment, Expectancy, and Reciprocity in Face Perception.Neural attention and evaluative responses to gay and lesbian couples.Does Seeing Faces of Young Black Boys Facilitate the Identification of Threatening Stimuli?The impact of childhood experience on amygdala response to perceptually familiar black and white faces.Who are you looking at? The influence of face gender on visual attention and memory for own- and other-race faces.For Black men, being tall increases threat stereotyping and police stops.Dissociating neural markers of stimulus memorability and subjective recognition during episodic retrieval.Cross-Cultural Evidence for Apparent Racial Outgroup Advantage: Congruence between Perceived Facial Aggressiveness and Fighting Success.Seeing the Expected, the Desired, and the Feared: Influences on Perceptual Interpretation and Directed AttentionInvestigating Animal Abuse: Some Theoretical and Methodological Issues
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Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
@tr
scientific article published on September 2008
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
@sv
videnskabelig artikel
@da
vědecký článek
@cs
name
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@en
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@nl
type
label
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@en
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@nl
prefLabel
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@en
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention.
@en
P2093
Abigail A Baird
Andrew R Todd
Jennifer A Richeson
P2860
P304
P356
10.1016/J.JESP.2008.03.006
P577
2008-09-01T00:00:00Z