Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 29
pro vyhledávání: '"Gillian Slessor"'
Publikováno v:
AIMS Neuroscience, Vol 2, Iss 3, Pp 139-152 (2015)
Both healthy aging and dementia cause problems with emotion perception, and the impairment is generally greater for specific emotions (anger, sadness and fear). Most studies to date have focused on static facial photographs of emotions. The current s
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/6300269ebe6b4cf7afb17d1d6b92b964
Publikováno v:
Experimental aging research.
Previous research investigated age differences in gaze following with an attentional cueing paradigm where participants view a face with averted gaze, and then respond to a target appearing in a location congruent or incongruent with the gaze cue. Ho
Publikováno v:
Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
Searching for an object in a complex scene is influenced by high-level factors such as how much the item would be expected in that setting (semantic consistency). There is also evidence that a person gazing at an object directs our attention towards
Autor:
Gillian Slessor, Pauline Insch, Isla Donaldson, Vestina Sciaponaite, Malgorzata Adamowicz, Louise H Phillips
Publikováno v:
The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences. 77(12)
Objectives Older adults are often less accurate than younger counterparts at identifying emotions such as anger, sadness, and fear from faces. They also look less at the eyes and more at the mouth during emotion perception. The current studies advanc
Publikováno v:
Acta Psychologica. 192:172-180
The present research assessed the nature of endogenous shifts of attention based on internally generated expectations (i.e., target location probability) and involuntary attention shifts following eye-gaze cues from line-drawings of schematic faces (
Autor:
Douglas Martin, Kenny Smith, James Urquhart, Jacqui Hutchison, Gillian Slessor, Sheila J. Cunningham
Publikováno v:
Hutchison, J, Cunningham, S J, Slessor, G, Urquhart, J, Smith, K & Martin, D 2017, ' Context and perceptual salience influence the formation of novel stereotypes via cumulative cultural evolution ', Cognitive Science, vol. 42, pp. 186-212 . https://doi.org/10.1111/cogs.12560
Cognitive Science
Cognitive Science
We use a transmission chain method to establish how context and category salience influence the formation of novel stereotypes through cumulative cultural evolution. We created novel alien targets by combining features from three category dimensions
Autor:
Douglas Martin, Sheila J. Cunningham, Jacqui Hutchison, Rachel Swainson, Diana-Maria Marosi, Gillian Slessor
Publikováno v:
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 60:51-58
Recent research suggests that when viewing a face two social categories (e.g., sex and race) can be activated simultaneously. However, multiple social categories – including age, race and sex – can be extracted from faces. In the present study we
Autor:
Gillian Slessor, Jill Warrington, Anthony P. Atkinson, Louise H. Phillips, Pauline Margaret Insch
Publikováno v:
AIMS Neuroscience, Vol 2, Iss 3, Pp 139-152 (2015)
AIMS neuroscience, 2015, Vol.2(3), pp.139-159 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
AIMS neuroscience, 2015, Vol.2(3), pp.139-159 [Peer Reviewed Journal]
Both healthy aging and dementia cause problems with emotion perception, and the impairment is generally greater for specific emotions (anger, sadness and fear). Most studies to date have focused on static facial photographs of emotions. The current s
Autor:
Gillian Slessor, Skye N. McLennan, Peter G. Rendell, Paulina Szczap, Phoebe E. Bailey, Ted Ruffman
Publikováno v:
Cognition and Emotion. 30:1017-1026
Trust is a particularly under-studied aspect of social relationships in older age. In the current study, young (n = 35) and older adults (n = 35) completed a series of one-shot social economic trust games in which they invested real money with truste
Publikováno v:
Martin, D, Cunningham, S J, Hutchison, J, Slessor, G & Smith, K 2017, ' How societal stereotypes might form and evolve via cumulative cultural evolution ', Social and Personality Psychology Compass, vol. 11, no. 9, pp. 1-13 . https://doi.org/10.1111/spc3.12338
The current article examines how societal stereotypes might form and evolve through a process of cumulative cultural evolution as social information is repeatedly passed from person to person. Social psychology research has done much to inform our un
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::0d2c19868c727206fbfcbaa5a51e306c
https://www.pure.ed.ac.uk/ws/files/40490335/MartinEtalSPPC2017HowSocietalStereotypesMightForm.pdf
https://www.pure.ed.ac.uk/ws/files/40490335/MartinEtalSPPC2017HowSocietalStereotypesMightForm.pdf