Research Topics
| Andrew YoungSummaryAffiliation: University of York Location: York, UK URL: http://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=zQk4IQYAAAAJ&hl=en Summary: Professor of Neuropsychology, University of York Publications: Calder, A.J., Keane, J., Cole, J., Campbell, R. and Young, A.W. (2000). Facial expression recognition by people with Möbius syndrome. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 17, 73-87. Calder, A.J., Keane, J., Manes, F., Antoun, N. and Young, A.W. (2000). Impaired recognition and experience of disgust following brain injury. Nature Neuroscience, 3, 1077-1078. Calder, A.J., Rowland, D., Young, A.W., Nimmo-Smith, I., Keane, J. and Perrett, D.I. (2000). Caricaturing facial expressions. Cognition, 76, 105-146. Calder, A.J., Young, A.W., Keane, J. and Dean, M. (2000). Configurational information in facial expression perception. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 26, 527-551. Ellis, H.D., Lewis, M.B., Moselhy, H.F. and Young, A.W. (2000). Automatic without autonomic responses to familiar faces: differential components of covert face recognition in a case of Capgras delusion. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 5, 255-269. Young, A.W. (2000). Wondrous strange: the neuropsychology of abnormal beliefs. Mind and Language, 15, 47-73. Young, A.W. and Ellis, H.D. (2000). Overt and covert face recognition. In Y. Rossetti and A. Revonsuo (Eds.), Beyond dissociation: interaction between dissociated implicit and explicit processing. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 195-219. Calder, A.J., Burton, A.M., Miller, P., Young, A.W. and Akamatsu, S. (2001). A principal component analysis of facial expressions. Vision Research, 41, 1179-1208. Calder, A.J., Lawrence, A.D. and Young, A.W. (2001). Neuropsychology of fear and loathing. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2, 352-363. Phillips, M.L., Medford, N., Young, A.W., Williams, L., Williams, S.C.R., Bullmore, E.T., Gray, J.A. and Brammer, M.J. (2001). Time courses of left and right amygdalar responses to fearful facial expressions. Human Brain Mapping, 12, 193-202. Calder, A.J., Lawrence, A.D., Keane, J., Scott, S.K., Owen, A.M., Christoffels, I. and Young, A.W. (2002). Reading the mind from eye gaze. Neuropsychologia, 40, 1129-1138. Keane, J., Calder, A.J., Hodges, J.R. and Young, A.W. (2002). Face and emotion processing in frontal variant frontotemporal dementia. Neuropsychologia, 40, 655-665. Richards, A., French, C.C., Calder, A.J., Webb, B., Fox, R. and Young, A.W. (2002). Anxiety-related bias in the classification of emotionally ambiguous facial expressions. Emotion, 2, 273-287. Tipples, J., Atkinson, A.P. and Young, A.W. (2002). The eyebrow frown: a salient social signal. Emotion, 2, 288-296. Tipples, J., Young, A.W., Quinlan, P., Broks, P. and Ellis, A.W. (2002). Searching for threat. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 55A, 1007-1026. Young, A.W., Perrett, D.I., Calder, A.J., Sprengelmeyer, R. and Ekman, P. (2002). Facial expressions of emotion: stimuli and tests (FEEST). Bury St. Edmunds: Thames Valley Test Company. Calder, A.J., Keane, J., Manly, T., Sprengelmeyer, R., Scott, S., Nimmo-Smith, I. and Young, A.W. (2003). Facial expression recognition across the adult life span. Neuropsychologia, 41, 195-202. Della Sala, S. and Young, A.W. (2003). Quaglinos 1867 case of prosopagnosia. Cortex, 39, 533-540. Heining, M., Young, A.W., Ioannou, G., Andrew, C.M., Brammer, M.J., Gray, J.A. and Phillips, M.L. (2003). Disgusting smells activate human anterior insula and ventral striatum. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1000, 380-384. Kemp, S., Young, A.W., Szulecka, K. and de Pauw, K.W. (2003). A case of paraprosopia and its treatment. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 8, 43-56. Lange, K., Williams, L.M., Young, A.W., Bullmore, E.T., Brammer, M.J., Williams, S.C.R., Gray, J.A. and Phillips, M.L. (2003). Task instructions modulate neural responses to fearful facial expressions. Biological Psychiatry, 53, 226-232. Papps, B.P., Calder, A.J., Young, A.W. and OCarroll, R.E. (2003). Dissociation of affective modulation of recollective and perceptual experience following amygdala damage. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 74, 253-254. Sprengelmeyer, R., Young, A.W., Mahn, K., Schroeder, U., Woitalla, D., Büttner, T., Kuhn, W. and Przuntek, H. (2003). Facial expression recognition in people with medicated and unmedicated Parkinsons disease. Neuropsychologia, 41, 1047-1057. Corrigendum, Neuropsychologia, 41, 1712-1713. Stone, V.E., Baron-Cohen, S., Calder, A.J., Keane, J. and Young, A.W. (2003). Acquired theory of mind impairments in individuals with bilateral amygdala lesions. Neuropsychologia, 41, 209-220. Surguladze, S.A., Brammer, M.J., Young, A.W., Andrew, C., Travis, M.J., Williams, S.C.R. and Phillips, M.L. (2003). A preferential increase in the extrastriate response to signals of danger. NeuroImage, 19, 1317-1328. Young, A.W. (2003). Face recognition with and without awareness. In A. Cleeremans (Ed.), The unity of consciousness: binding, integration, and dissociation. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 233-250. Atkinson, A.P., Dittrich, W.H., Gemmell, A.J. and Young, A.W. (2004). Emotion perception from dynamic and static body expressions in point-light and full-light displays. Perception, 33, 717-746. Brédart, S. and Young, A.W. (2004). Self-recognition in everyday life. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry, 9, 183-197. Hall, J., Harris, J.M., Sprengelmeyer, R., Sprengelmeyer, A., Young, A.W., Santos, I.M., Johnstone, E.C. and Lawrie, S.M. (2004). Social cognition and face processing in schizophrenia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 185, 169-170. Hsu, S-M. and Young, A.W. (2004). Adaptation effects in facial expression recognition. Visual Cognition, 11, 871-899. Phillips, M.L., Williams, L.M., Heining, M., Herba, C.M., Russell, T., Andrew, C., Bullmore, E.T., Brammer, M.J., Williams, S.C.R., Morgan, M.J., Young, A.W. and Gray, J.A. (2004). Differential neural responses to overt and covert presentations of facial expressions of fear and disgust. NeuroImage, 21, 1486-1498. Surguladze, S.A., Young, A.W., Senior, C., Brébion, G., Travis, M.J. and Phillips, M.L. (2004). Recognition accuracy and response bias to happy and sad facial expressions in patients with major depression. Neuropsychology, 18, 212-218. Williams, L.M., Liddell, B.J., Rathjen, J., Brown, K.J., Gray, J., Phillips, M., Young, A.W. and Gordon, E. (2004). Mapping the time course of nonconscious and conscious perception of fear: an integration of central and peripheral measures. Human Brain Mapping, 21, 64-74. Atkinson, A.P., Tipples, J., Burt, D.M. and Young, A.W. (2005). Asymmetric interference between sex and emotion in face perception. Perception and Psychophysics, 67, 1199-1213. Calder, A.J. and Young, A.W. (2005). Understanding the recognition of facial identity and facial expression. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 6, 641-651. Carroll, N.C. and Young, A.W. (2005). Priming of emotion recognition. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 58A, 1173-1197. Santos, I.M. and Young, A.W. (2005). Exploring the perception of social characteristics in faces using the isolation effect. Visual Cognition, 12, 213-247. Surguladze, S., Brammer, M.J., Keedwell, P., Giampetro, V., Young, A.W., Travis, M.J., Williams, S.C.R. and Phillips, M.L. (2005). A differential pattern of neural response toward sad versus happy facial expressions in major depressive disorder. Biological Psychiatry, 57, 201-209. Wilson, B.A., Berry, E., Gracey, F., Harrison, C., Stow, I., Macniven, J., Weatherley, J. and Young, A.W. (2005). Egocentric disorientation following bilateral parietal lobe damage. Cortex, 41, 547-554. Fowler, H.L., Baker, G.A., Tipples, J., Hare, D.J., Keller, S., Chadwick, D.W. and Young, A.W. (2006). Recognition of emotion with temporal lobe epilepsy and asymmetrical amygdala damage. Epilepsy and Behavior, 9, 164-172. Liu, C.H., Ward, J. and Young, A.W. (2006). Transfer between two- and three-dimensional representations of faces. Visual Cognition, 13, 51-64. Sprengelmeyer, R., Schroeder, U., Young, A.W. and Epplen, J.T. (2006). Disgust in pre-clinical Huntington’s disease: a longitudinal study. Neuropsychologia, 44, 518-533. Wright, H., Wardlaw, J., Young, A.W. and Zeman, A. (2006). Prosopagnosia following nonconvulsive status epilepticus associated with a left fusiform gyrus malformation. Epilepsy and Behavior, 9, 197-203. Herba, C.M., Heining, M., Young, A.W., Browning, M., Benson, P.J., Phillips, M.L. and Gray, J.A. (2007). Conscious and non-conscious discrimination of facial expressions. Visual Cognition, 15, 36-47. Asghar, A.U.R., Chiu, Y-C., Hallam, G., Liu, S., Mole, H., Wright, H. and Young, A.W. (2008). An amygdala response to fearful faces with covered eyes. Neuropsychologia, 46, 2364-2370. Creswell, C. Woolgar, M., Cooper, P., Giannakakis, A., Schofield, E., Young, A.W. and Murray, L. (2008). Processing of faces and emotional expressions in infants at risk of social phobia. Cognition and Emotion, 22, 437-458. Hall, J, Whalley, H.C., McKirdy, J.W., Romaniuk, L., McGonigle, D., McIntosh, A.M., Baig, B.J., Gountouna, V-E., Job, D.E., Donaldson, D.I., Sprengelmeyer, R., Young, A.W., Johnstone, E.C. and Lawrie, S.M. (2008). Overactivation of fear systems to neutral faces in schizophrenia. Biological Psychiatry, 64, 70-73. Huang, Y-M., Baddeley, A.D. and Young, A.W. (2008). Attentional capture by emotional stimuli is modulated by semantic processing. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 34, 328-339. Longmore, C.A., Liu, C.H. and Young, A.W. (2008). Learning faces from photographs. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 34, 77-100. Santos, I.M., Iglesias, J., Olivares, E.I. and Young, A.W. (2008). Differential effects of object-based attention on evoked potentials to fearful and disgusted faces. Neuropsychologia, 46, 1468-1479. Santos, I.M. and Young, A.W. (2008). Effects of inversion and negation on social inferences from faces. Perception, 37, 1061-1078. Wright, B., Clarke, N., Jordan, J., Young, A.W., Clarke, P., Miles, J., Nation, K., Clarke, L. and Williams, C. (2008). Emotion recognition in faces and the use of visual context in young people with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders. Autism, 12, 607-626. Young, A.W., de Haan, E.H.F. and Bauer, R.M. (2008). Face perception: a very special issue. Journal of Neuropsychology, 2, 1-14. Hagan, C.C., Woods, W., Johnson, S., Calder, A.J., Green, G.G.R. and Young, A.W. (2009). MEG demonstrates a supra-additive response to facial and vocal emotion in right superior temporal sulcus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, USA, 106, 20010-20015. Sprengelmeyer, R., Perrett, D.I., Cornwell, R.E., Lobmaier, J., Sprengelmeyer, A., Aasheim, H., Black, I., Cameron, L., Craw, S., Milne, N., Rhodes, E. and Young, A.W. (2009). The cutest little baby face: a hormonal link to sensitivity for cuteness in infant faces. Psychological Science, 20, 149-154. Andrews, T.J., Davies-Thompson, J., Kingstone, A. and Young, A.W. (2010). Internal and external features of the face are represented holistically in face-selective regions of visual cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 30, 3544-3552. Calder, A.J., Keane, J., Young, A.W., Lawrence, A.D., Mason, S. and Barker, R.A. (2010). The relation between anger and different forms of disgust: implications for emotion recognition impairments in Huntingtons disease. Neuropsychologia, 48, 2719-2729. Hall, J., Whalley, H.C., McKirdy, J.W., Sprengelmeyer, R., Santos, I.M., Donaldson, D.I., McGonigle, D.J., Young, A.W., McIntosh, A.M., Johnstone, E.C. and Lawrie, S,M. (2010). A common neural system mediating two different forms of social judgement. Psychological Medicine, 40, 1183-1192. Imhoff, R., Schmidt, A.F., Nordsiek, U., Luzar, C., Young, A.W. and Banse, R. (2010). Viewing time effects revisited: prolonged response latencies for sexually attractive targets under restricted task conditions. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 39, 1275-1288. Lee, L.C., Andrews, T.J., Johnson, S.J., Woods, W., Gouws, A., Green, G.G.R. and Young, A.W. (2010). Neural responses to rigidly moving faces displaying shifts in social attention investigated with fMRI and MEG. Neuropsychologia, 48, 477-490. Philip, R.C.M., Whalley, H.C., Stanfield, A.C., Sprengelmeyer, R., Santos, I.M., Young, A.W., Atkinson, A.P., Calder, A.J., Johnstone, E.C., Lawrie, S,M. and Hall, J. (2010). Deficits in facial, body movement and vocal emotional processing in autism spectrum disorders. Psychological Medicine, 40, 1919-1929. Sprengelmeyer, R., Perrett, D.I. and Young, A.W. (2010). Reproductive hormones modulate cuteness processing. (Reply to Fleischman, Navarette and Fessler). Psychological Science, 21, 753. Santos, I.M. and Young, A.W. (2011). Inferring social attributes from different face regions: evidence for holistic processing. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 64, 751-766. Young, A.W. (2011). Disorders of face perception. In A.J. Calder, G. Rhodes, M.H. Johnson and J.V. Haxby (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of face perception. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 77-91. Young, A.W. and Bruce, V. (2011). Understanding person perception. British Journal of Psychology, 102, 959-974. Bruce, V. and Young, A.W. (2012). Face perception. Hove: Psychology Press. Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Understanding person perceptionAndrew W Young
Department of Psychology and York Neuroimaging Centre, University of York, UK
Br J Psychol 102:959-74. 2011..We discuss these, and then look at how the field has been transformed by computing developments, finishing with a few thoughts about where things may go over the next few (25?) years...
Differential effects of object-based attention on evoked potentials to fearful and disgusted facesIsabel M Santos
Universidade de Aveiro, Departamento de Ciências da Educação, Campus Universitario de Santiago, 3810 193 Aveiro, Portugal
Neuropsychologia 46:1468-79. 2008..Results are interpreted in terms of different neural mechanisms for the perception of fear and disgust and related to the functional significance of these two emotions for the survival of the organism...
Learning faces from photographsChristopher A Longmore
Department of Psychology, University of York, UK
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 34:77-100. 2008..The relative roles of pictorial and structural codes in mediating learning faces from photographs need to be reconsidered...
Prosopagnosia following nonconvulsive status epilepticus associated with a left fusiform gyrus malformationHelen Wright
Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9A9, UK
Epilepsy Behav 9:197-203. 2006..Focal neuropsychological deficits in patients with refractory partial epilepsy who develop nonconvulsive status epilepticus may be underdiagnosed...
Recognition of emotion with temporal lobe epilepsy and asymmetrical amygdala damageHelen L Fowler
Department of Behavioural Medicine, Hope Hospital, Stott Lane, Salford M6 8HD, UK
Epilepsy Behav 9:164-72. 2006..In this study, ability to recognize auditory and visual expressions of emotion was investigated in people with asymmetrical amygdala damage (AAD) and temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE)...
Asymmetric interference between sex and emotion in face perceptionAnthony P Atkinson
Department of Psychology, University of Durham, Science Laboratories, South Road, Durham DH 1 3LE, England
Percept Psychophys 67:1199-213. 2005..The implications of these findings for the functional independence of the different components of face processing are discussed...
Priming of emotion recognitionNaomi C Carroll
University of York, York, UK
Q J Exp Psychol A 58:1173-97. 2005..Experiment 4 extended the findings by showing that there are category-based effects as well as valence effects in emotional priming, supporting a categorical view of emotion recognition...
Disgust in pre-clinical Huntington's disease: a longitudinal studyR Sprengelmeyer
School of Psychology, University of St Andrews, St Mary s College, South Street, St Andrews, Scotland KY16 9JP, UK
Neuropsychologia 44:518-33. 2006..The inclusion of a healthy control group (n = 37) further allowed an estimate of the genetic and environmental contribution to deficits in facial emotion recognition...
Understanding the recognition of facial identity and facial expressionAndrew J Calder
Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK
Nat Rev Neurosci 6:641-51. 2005..Alongside this two-pathway framework, other possible models of facial identity and expression recognition, including one that has emerged from principal component analysis techniques, should be considered...
Overactivation of fear systems to neutral faces in schizophreniaJeremy Hall
Division of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Biol Psychiatry 64:70-3. 2008..We investigated whether the apparent decrease in amygdala activation in schizophrenia could actually derive from increased amygdala activation to the neutral comparator stimuli...
Attentional capture by emotional stimuli is modulated by semantic processingYang Ming Huang
Department of Psychology, University of York, York, England
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 34:328-39. 2008..Combining the results from 5 experiments, the authors conclude that semantic processing can modulate the attentional capture effect of emotional stimuli...
An amygdala response to fearful faces with covered eyesAziz U R Asghar
Hull York Medical School and Department of Biological Sciences, University of Hull, HU6 7RX, UK
Neuropsychologia 46:2364-70. 2008..The amygdala can therefore use information from facial regions other than the eyes, allowing it to respond differentially to fearful compared to neutral faces even when the eye region is hidden...
Internal and external features of the face are represented holistically in face-selective regions of visual cortexTimothy J Andrews
Department of Psychology, University of York, York, United Kingdom
J Neurosci 30:3544-52. 2010....
Viewing time effects revisited: prolonged response latencies for sexually attractive targets under restricted task conditionsRoland Imhoff
Social and Legal Psychology, University of Bonn, Kaiser Karl Ring 9, Bonn, Germany
Arch Sex Behav 39:1275-88. 2010..Mate identification and schematic processes are discussed as the remaining plausible mechanisms for prolonged response latencies for sexually attractive targets under restricted conditions...
Deficits in facial, body movement and vocal emotional processing in autism spectrum disordersR C M Philip
Division of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh, Royal Edinburgh Hospital, Edinburgh, UK
Psychol Med 40:1919-29. 2010..To date, however, no studies have examined emotion processing in autism across a broad range of social signals...
Neural responses to rigidly moving faces displaying shifts in social attention investigated with fMRI and MEGLaura C Lee
Department of Psychology, University of York, York, UK
Neuropsychologia 48:477-90. 2010....
A common neural system mediating two different forms of social judgementJ Hall
Division of Psychiatry, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH10 5HF, UK
Psychol Med 40:1183-92. 2010..We have investigated healthy control participants to see whether there is a common neural system activated during such social decisions, on the basis that deficits in this system may contribute to the impairments seen in these disorders...
Face perception: a very special issueAndrew W Young
Department of Psychology and York Neuroimaging Centre, University of York, York, UK
J Neuropsychol 2:1-14. 2008..To one such question, whether 'face perception' is a special issue in the broad field of the cognitive neurosciences, the answer is clearly yes!..
Emotion recognition in faces and the use of visual context in young people with high-functioning autism spectrum disordersBarry Wright
North Yorkshire and York Primary Care Trust, UK
Autism 12:607-26. 2008..Test conditions may lead to results different from everyday life. Alternatively, deficits in emotion recognition in high-functioning ASD may be less marked than previously thought...
Effects of inversion and negation on social inferences from facesIsabel M Santos
Departamento de Ciências da Educação, Universidade de Aveiro, Campus Universitario de Santiago, 3810 193 Aveiro, Portugal
Perception 37:1061-78. 2008..In addition, the fact that there was a similar pattern of impairment across most judgments suggests that there is an initial common perceptual representation of the face, from which most characteristics are inferred...
Egocentric disorientation following bilateral parietal lobe damageBarbara A Wilson
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
Cortex 41:547-54. 2005..His performance fulfils the criteria for egocentric disorientation and fits the predictions derived from Aguirre and D'Esposito's views...
A differential pattern of neural response toward sad versus happy facial expressions in major depressive disorderSimon Surguladze
Institute of Psychiatry, King s College London, London
Biol Psychiatry 57:201-9. 2005..In depressed individuals, implicit and explicit attentional biases away from happy and toward sad stimuli have been demonstrated. These may be associated with the negative cognitions in these individuals...
Emotion perception from dynamic and static body expressions in point-light and full-light displaysAnthony P Atkinson
Department of Psychology, University of Durham, Science Laboratories, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
Perception 33:717-46. 2004....
Facial expression recognition across the adult life spanAndrew J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK
Neuropsychologia 41:195-202. 2003..We suggest that the dissociable effects found for fear and disgust are consistent with the differential effects of ageing on brain regions involved in these emotions...
Searching for threatJason Tipples
University of York, UK
Q J Exp Psychol A 55:1007-26. 2002..We conclude that the visual search paradigm does not readily reveal any biases that might exist for threatening stimuli in the general population...
Reading the mind from eye gazeAndrew J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, Cambridge, UK
Neuropsychologia 40:1129-38. 2002..Additional subtraction contrasts largely confirmed these patterns. Our results demonstrate a considerable degree of overlap between the medial frontal areas involved in eye gaze processing and theory of mind tasks...
Face and emotion processing in frontal variant frontotemporal dementiaJill Keane
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK
Neuropsychologia 40:655-65. 2002..It is plausible that the emotion recognition impairments observed contribute to the abnormal social behaviour that is characteristic of this condition...
Neuropsychology of fear and loathingA J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK
Nat Rev Neurosci 2:352-63. 2001..We review this research and its implications for theories of emotion...
A principal component analysis of facial expressionsA J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, CB2 2EF, Cambridge, UK
Vision Res 41:1179-208. 2001..The implications for models of face processing are discussed...
Time courses of left and right amygdalar responses to fearful facial expressionsM L Phillips
Division of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, London, United Kingdom
Hum Brain Mapp 12:193-202. 2001....
Impaired recognition and experience of disgust following brain injuryA J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge CB2 2EF, UK
Nat Neurosci 3:1077-8. 2000..Here we describe evidence, from a patient with insula and putamen damage, for a neural system for recognizing social signals of disgust from multiple modalities...
Acquired theory of mind impairments in individuals with bilateral amygdala lesionsValerie E Stone
Department of Psychology, University of Denver, 2155 South Race Street, Denver, CO 80208 2478, USA
Neuropsychologia 41:209-20. 2003..These results indicate that the amygdala's critical role in theory of mind may not be just in development, but also in "on-line" theory of mind processing in the adult brain...
Dissociation of affective modulation of recollective and perceptual experience following amygdala damageB P Papps
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 74:253-4. 2003....
Task instructions modulate neural responses to fearful facial expressionsKezia Lange
Institute of Psychiatry, London, United Kingdom
Biol Psychiatry 53:226-32. 2003..CONCLUSIONS: Neural responses to fearful facial expressions are modulated by task instructions...
Social cognition and face processing in schizophreniaJeremy Hall
Psychiatry Department, Lynebank Hospital, Halbeath Road, Dunfermline, Fife, UK
Br J Psychiatry 185:169-70. 2004....
Recognition accuracy and response bias to happy and sad facial expressions in patients with major depressionSimon A Surguladze
Section of Neuroscience and Emotion, Division of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, King s College London, London, United Kingdom
Neuropsychology 18:212-8. 2004..The authors suggest that, in depressed patients, the inability to accurately identify subtle changes in facial expression displayed by others in social situations may underlie the impaired interpersonal functioning...
Differential neural responses to overt and covert presentations of facial expressions of fear and disgustMary L Phillips
Section of Neuroscience and Emotion, Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, KCL, London, UK
Neuroimage 21:1484-96. 2004..These results therefore suggest distinct neural correlates of conscious and unconscious emotion perception...
Disgusting smells activate human anterior insula and ventral striatumMaike Heining
Department of Psychology, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, London, UK
Ann N Y Acad Sci 1000:380-4. 2003
Mapping the time course of nonconscious and conscious perception of fear: an integration of central and peripheral measuresLeanne M Williams
School of Psychology, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia
Hum Brain Mapp 21:64-74. 2004..By contrast, the N4 may index the conscious integration of emotion stimuli in working memory, subserved by greater cortical engagement. Hum. Brain Mapping 21:64-74, 2004...
A preferential increase in the extrastriate response to signals of dangerSimon A Surguladze
Section of Neuroscience and Emotion, Division of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, London SE5 8AF, UK
Neuroimage 19:1317-28. 2003..We suggest that this differential pattern of response to different categories of emotional signals allows the preferential direction of visual attention to signals of imminent danger than to other, less-salient emotional stimuli...
The eyebrow frown: a salient social signalJason Tipples
Department of Psychology, The University of Hull, England
Emotion 2:288-96. 2002..Overall, the results are interpreted as showing that the v-shaped eyebrow configuration affords easy detection, but only when other internal facial features are present...
Anxiety-related bias in the classification of emotionally ambiguous facial expressionsAnne Richards
School of Psychology, Birkbeck College, University of London, Bloomsbury, England
Emotion 2:273-87. 2002..The mood-manipulated group had increased sensitivity for anger expressions, and trait anxiety did not moderate these effects. Interpretations of the results related to the classification of fearful expressions are discussed...
Caricaturing facial expressionsA J Calder
MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, CB2 2EF, Cambridge, UK
Cognition 76:105-46. 2000..An exemplar-based multidimensional model is proposed as an alternative account...
