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Your search keyword '"Lipp, Ottmar V."' showing total 29 results

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29 results on '"Lipp, Ottmar V."'

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1. The face pareidolia illusion drives a happy face advantage that is dependent on perceived gender.

2. Emotional scenes as context in emotional expression recognition: The role of emotion or valence match.

3. Bodily cues of sex and emotion can interact symmetrically: Evidence from simple categorization and the garner paradigm.

4. Conditional stimulus choices affect fear learning: Comparing fear conditioning with neutral faces and shapes or angry faces.

5. Angry and fearful compared to happy or neutral faces as conditional stimuli in human fear conditioning: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

6. Featural vs. Holistic processing and visual sampling in the influence of social category cues on emotion recognition.

7. Searching for emotion: A top-down set governs attentional orienting to facial expressions.

8. Complex facial emotion recognition and atypical gaze patterns in autistic adults.

9. You look pretty happy: Attractiveness moderates emotion perception.

10. Facial age cues and emotional expression interact asymmetrically: age cues moderate emotion categorisation.

11. The influence of social category cues on the happy categorisation advantage depends on expression valence.

12. Facial race and sex cues have a comparable influence on emotion recognition in Chinese and Australian participants.

13. The influence of facial sex cues on emotional expression categorization is not fixed.

14. Visual search for emotional expressions: Effect of stimulus set on anger and happiness superiority.

15. Stimulus set size modulates the sex-emotion interaction in face categorization.

16. The effect of face inversion on the detection of emotional faces in visual search.

17. Emotional expressions preferentially elicit implicit evaluations of faces also varying in race or age.

18. Different faces in the crowd: a happiness superiority effect for schematic faces in heterogeneous backgrounds.

19. Searching for emotion or race: task-irrelevant facial cues have asymmetrical effects.

20. Visual search for schematic emotional faces: angry faces are more than crosses.

21. In search of the emotional face: anger versus happiness superiority in visual search.

22. The effect of poser race on the happy categorization advantage depends on stimulus type, set size, and presentation duration.

23. Of toothy grins and angry snarls--open mouth displays contribute to efficiency gains in search for emotional faces.

24. On the resistance to extinction of fear conditioned to angry faces.

25. No effect of inversion on attentional and affective processing of facial expressions.

26. Complex facial emotion recognition and atypical gaze patterns in autistic adults.

27. Of toothy grins and angry snarls—Open mouth displays contribute to efficiency gains in search for emotional faces

28. Make a lasting impression: The neural consequences of re-encountering people who emote inappropriately.

29. Discrepant Integration Times for Upright and Inverted Faces.

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