Snakes, spiders, guns, and syringes: how specific are evolutionary constraints on the detection of threatening stimuli?
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The detection of fear-relevant stimuli: are guns noticed as quickly as snakes?A developmental neuroscience perspective on affect-biased attentionDetecting the Snake in the GrassHappiness increases distraction by auditory deviant stimuli.Sex differences in event-related potentials and attentional biases to emotional facial stimuli.Beyond arousal and valence: the importance of the biological versus social relevance of emotional stimuli.Animate Objects are Detected More Frequently than Inanimate Objects in Inattentional Blindness Tasks Independently of Threat.Are we afraid of different categories of stimuli in identical ways? Evidence from skin conductance responses.Oculomotor examination of the weapon focus effect: does a gun automatically engage visual attention?Appraising the role of visual threat in speeded detection and classification tasks.Affective monitoring: a generic mechanism for affect elicitation.Threat, domain-specificity and the human amygdala.Unconscious Processing of Negative Animals and Objects: Role of the Amygdala Revealed by fMRI.Brain activation underlying threat detection to targets of different races.Eye movement related brain responses to emotional scenes during free viewingDistinct brain activity in processing negative pictures of animals and objects - the role of human contextsThe visual detection of threat: a cautionary tale.Of guns and snakes: testing a modern threat superiority effect.Deadly Attraction - Attentional Bias toward Preferred Cigarette Brand in Smokers.Evolutionary and Modern Image Content Differentially Influence the Processing of Emotional Pictures.Developmental Differences in Infants' Attention to Social and Nonsocial Threats.Subcortical Facilitation of Behavioral Responses to Threat.Attentional biases and memory for emotional stimuli in men and male rhesus monkeys.Attentional bias, distractibility and short-term memory in anxiety.The snake in the grass revisited: an experimental comparison of threat detection paradigms.Effects of Weapons on Aggressive Thoughts, Angry Feelings, Hostile Appraisals, and Aggressive Behavior: A Meta-Analytic Review of the Weapons Effect Literature.Fear boosts the early neural coding of faces.Count on arousal: introducing a new method for investigating the effects of emotional valence and arousal on visual search performance.In Harm's Way: On Preferential Response to Threatening Stimuli.Attachment style impacts behavior and early oculomotor response to positive, but not negative, pictures.Threatening scenes but not threatening faces shorten time-to-contact estimates.Just another social scene: evidence for decreased attention to negative social scenes in high-functioning autism.Priming a natural or human-made environment directs attention to context-congruent threatening stimuli.Accumulating and remembering the details of neutral and emotional natural scenes.Emotional and neutral scenes in competition: orienting, efficiency, and identification.Adaptive memory: fitness relevant stimuli show a memory advantage in a game of pelmanism.Line-Drawn Scenes Provide Sufficient Information for Discrimination of Threat and Mere Negativity.Perceiving object dangerousness: an escape from pain?Implied threat or part of the scenery: Americans’ perceptions of open carry
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P2860
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syringes: how specific are evolutionary constraints on the detection of threatening stimuli?
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2006 nî lūn-bûn
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2006年の論文
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2006年学术文章
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2006年学术文章
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name
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@en
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@nl
type
label
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@en
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@nl
prefLabel
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@en
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@nl
P2860
P1476
Snakes, spiders, guns, and syr ...... ection of threatening stimuli?
@en
P2093
Isabelle Blanchette
P2860
P304
P356
10.1080/02724980543000204
P577
2006-08-01T00:00:00Z