Why we respond faster to the self than to others? An implicit positive association theory of self-advantage during implicit face recognition.
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Reward Promotes Self-Face Processing: An Event-Related Potential StudyNegative mood disrupts self- and reward-biases in perceptual matching.Immune to Situation: The Self-Serving Bias in Unambiguous Contexts.Who's afraid of the boss: cultural differences in social hierarchies modulate self-face recognition in Chinese and Americans.Is the self always better than a friend? Self-face recognition in Christians and atheists.Modulation of self-esteem in self- and other-evaluations primed by subliminal and supraliminal facesWhy am I not photogenic? Differences in face memory for the self and others.Is that me or my twin? Lack of self-face recognition advantage in identical twins.Cultural difference in neural mechanisms of self-recognition.Expanding and retracting from the self: Gains and costs in switching self-associations.Identifying Oneself with the Face of Someone Else Impairs the Egocentered Visuo-spatial Mechanisms: A New Double Mirror Paradigm to Study Self-other Distinction and Interaction.Negative Emotion Weakens the Degree of Self-Reference Effect: Evidence from ERPs.Cultural influences on social feedback processing of character traits.Try to see it my way: Embodied perspective enhances self and friend-biases in perceptual matching.Attentional control and the self: The Self-Attention Network (SAN).Self-prioritization and perceptual matching: The effects of temporal construalDistinct effects of reminding mortality and physical pain on the default-mode activity and activity underlying self-reflection.Self or Familiar-Face Recognition Advantage? New Insight Using Ambient Images.The multisensory basis of the self: From body to identity to others [Formula: see text].The ubiquitous self: what the properties of self-bias tell us about the self.Self-bias modulates saccadic control.Right perceptual bias and self-face recognition in individuals with congenital prosopagnosia.Dynamically orienting your own face facilitates the automatic attraction of attention.Consciously over Unconsciously Perceived Rewards Facilitate Self-face Processing: An ERP StudySelf-esteem Modulates the P3 Component in Response to the Self-face Processing after Priming with Emotional Faces.The Interactive Influence of Perceived Ownership and Perceived Choosership of Stocks on Brain Response to Stock Outcomes.Two Polarities of Attention in Social Contexts: From Attending-to-Others to Attending-to-Self.Self-Construal Priming Modulates Self-Evaluation under Social Threat.Startling similarity: Effects of facial self-resemblance and familiarity on the processing of emotional faces.An anterior-posterior axis within the ventromedial prefrontal cortex separates self and reward.The neurobiology of self-face recognition in depressed adolescents with low or high suicidality.The neurobiology of self face recognition among depressed adolescents.The neural basis of self-face recognition after self-concept threat and comparison with important others.Prioritization of arbitrary faces associated to self: An EEG study.5-HTTLPR polymorphism modulates neural mechanisms of negative self-reflection.Do you remember your sad face? The roles of negative cognitive style and sad mood.Functional dissociation of the left and right fusiform gyrus in self-face recognition.Temporal Features of the Differentiation between Self-Name and Religious Leader Name among Christians: An ERP Study.Looking at My Own Face: Visual Processing Strategies in Self-Other Face Recognition.The Role of Familiarity on Viewpoint Adaptation for Self-Face and Other-Face Images.
P2860
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P2860
Why we respond faster to the self than to others? An implicit positive association theory of self-advantage during implicit face recognition.
description
2010 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2010年の論文
@ja
2010年学术文章
@wuu
2010年学术文章
@zh-cn
2010年学术文章
@zh-hans
2010年学术文章
@zh-my
2010年学术文章
@zh-sg
2010年學術文章
@yue
2010年學術文章
@zh
2010年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Why we respond faster to the s ...... ing implicit face recognition.
@en
type
label
Why we respond faster to the s ...... ing implicit face recognition.
@en
prefLabel
Why we respond faster to the s ...... ing implicit face recognition.
@en
P356
P1476
Why we respond faster to the s ...... ing implicit face recognition.
@en
P2093
P304
P356
10.1037/A0015797
P577
2010-06-01T00:00:00Z