78 results on '"Eric J. Vanman"'
Search Results
2. Empathy moderates the relationship between cognitive load and prosocial behaviour
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Roger S. Gamble, Julie D. Henry, and Eric J. Vanman
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
Abstract Cognitive load reduces both empathy and prosocial behaviour. However, studies demonstrating these effects have induced cognitive load in a temporally limited, artificial manner that fails to capture real-world cognitive load. Drawing from cognitive load theory, we investigated whether naturally occurring cognitive load from the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic moderated the relationship between empathy and prosocial behaviour (operationalised as support for public health measures). This large study in an Australian sample (N = 600) identified negative relationships between pandemic fatigue, empathy for people vulnerable to COVID-19, and prosocial behaviour, and a positive relationship between empathy and prosocial behaviour. Additionally, we found that the negative effect of the pandemic on prosocial behaviour depended on empathy for vulnerable others, with pandemic fatigue’s effects lowest for those with the highest empathy. These findings highlight the interrelationships of cognitive load and empathy, and the potential value of eliciting empathy to ease the impact of real-world cognitive load on prosocial behaviour.
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- 2023
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3. A functionalist approach to online trolling
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Lewis Nitschinsk, Stephanie J. Tobin, and Eric J. Vanman
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trolling ,sadism ,psychopathy ,anonymity ,online ,motivations ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
Online trolling is often linked to sadism and psychopathy. Yet, little research has assessed why people high in these traits seek online environments to achieve their nefarious goals. We employ a functionalist approach to examine whether people high in sadism and psychopathy are motivated to seek the affordances of online environments (e.g., anonymity) to reveal their malevolent self-aspects by engaging in trolling behavior. A sample of 515 university undergraduates (Mage = 20.47) read vignettes depicting trolling incidents and rated the acceptability of the perpetrators’ actions and whether they had ever written similar comments. Participants then completed measures of psychopathy, sadism, and toxic anonymous motivations. We find that toxic anonymous motivations partially mediate the relationship between psychopathy and sadism, and online trolling. Whereas trolling is often understood through its underlying personality traits, toxic motivations to seek anonymity may be a more proximal predictor of who is likely to troll online.
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- 2023
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4. The Relationship of Gender Roles and Beliefs to Crying in an International Sample
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Leah S. Sharman, Genevieve A. Dingle, Marc Baker, Agneta Fischer, Asmir Gračanin, Igor Kardum, Harry Manley, Kunalan Manokara, Sirirada Pattara-angkoon, Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets, and Eric J. Vanman
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crying ,gender roles ,social support ,beliefs about crying ,emotion regulation ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
This study aimed to (1) investigate the variation in self ascription to gender roles and attitudes toward gender roles across countries and its associations with crying behaviors, emotion change, and beliefs about crying and (2) understand how the presence of others affects our evaluations of emotion following crying. This was a large international survey design study (N = 893) conducted in Australia, Croatia, the Netherlands, Thailand, and the United Kingdom. Analyses revealed that, across countries, gender, self-ascribed gender roles, and gender role attitudes (GRA) were related to behavioral crying responses, but not related to emotion change following crying. How a person evaluates crying, instead, appeared to be highly related to one’s beliefs about the helpfulness of crying, irrespective of gender. Results regarding crying when others were present showed that people are more likely both to cry and to feel that they received help around a person that they know, compared to a stranger. Furthermore, closeness to persons present during crying did not affect whether help was provided. When a crier reported that they were helped, they also tended to report feeling better following crying than those who cried around others but did not receive help. Few cross-country differences emerged, suggesting that a person’s responses to crying are quite consistent among the countries investigated here, with regard to its relationship with a person’s gender role, crying beliefs, and reactions to the presence of others.
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- 2019
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5. Probing prejudice with startle eyeblink modification: a marker of attention, emotion, or both?
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Eric J. Vanman, John P. Ryan, William C. Pedersen, and Tiffany A. Ito
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Startle ,Facial electromyography ,Affect ,Prejudice ,Attention ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
In social neuroscience research, startle eyeblink modification can serve as a marker of emotion, but it is less clear whether it can also serve as a marker of prejudice. In Experiment 1, 30 White students viewed photographs of White and Black targets while the startle eyeblink reflex and facial EMG from the brow and cheek regions were recorded. Prejudice was related to facial EMG activity, but not to startle modification, which instead appeared to index attention to race. To test further whether racial categorizations are associated with differential attention, a dual-task paradigm was used in Experiment 2. Fifty-four White and fifty-five Black participants responded more slowly to a tone presented when viewing a racial outgroup member or a negative stimulus, indicating that both draw more attention than ingroup members or positive stimuli. We conclude that startle modification is useful to index differential attention to groups when intergroup threat is low.
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- 2013
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6. The Disinhibiting Effects of Anonymity Increase Online Trolling.
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Lewis Nitschinsk, Stephanie J. Tobin, and Eric J. Vanman
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- 2022
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7. The Effect of Heuristic Cues on Jurors’ Systematic Information Processing in Rape Trials
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Faye T. Nitschke, Blake M. McKimmie, and Eric J. Vanman
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Gender Studies ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,General Psychology - Abstract
There is concern that jurors’ decisions in rape trials might be influenced by misleading cues (e.g., victim stereotypes) potentially explaining disproportionately low conviction rates. We investigated the bias hypothesis from the heuristic–systematic model as an explanation for how jurors may be influenced by misleading stereotypes even while they are effortfully processing rape trial evidence. We expected that when case evidence was ambiguous, stereotypes would guide motivated participants’ effortful information processing, but not when case evidence was strong. Mock jurors ( N = 901) were asked to make decisions about a rape trial with either ambiguous or strong evidence in which the complainant was either stereotypically distressed or unemotional giving evidence. Participants were either placed under high motivation conditions to encourage effortful information processing or in a control condition with low motivation instructions to encourage less effortful processing as a comparison. Participants’ information processing and case decisions were measured as key dependent variables. We found partial support for the hypothesized interaction and the bias hypothesis, suggesting that the types of evidence participants attended to in decision-making were influenced by misleading stereotypical cues. Our findings have implications for interventions to reduce the effect of misleading stereotypes on decisions in rape trials. Additional online materials for this article are available on PWQ's website at http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/suppl/10.1177/03616843221118018 .
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- 2022
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8. Revisiting (dis)fluency: Metacognitive difficulty as a novelty cue that evokes feeling‐of‐interest
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Billy Sung, Eric J. Vanman, and Nicole Hartley
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Marketing ,Applied Psychology - Published
- 2022
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9. A Meta-Analysis of the Effects of Social Media Exposure to Upward Comparison Targets on Self-Evaluations and Emotions
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Carly A. McComb, Eric J. Vanman, and Stephanie J. Tobin
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Social Psychology ,Communication ,Applied Psychology - Abstract
Social media have become a pervasive part of contemporary culture and are an essential part of the daily lives of an increasing number of people. Its popularity has brought unlimited opportunities to compare oneself with other people. This meta-analysis combined and summarized the findings of previous experimental research, with the aim of generating causal conclusions regarding the effects of exposure to upward comparison targets on self-evaluations and emotions in a social media context. We identified 48 articles involving 7679 participants through a systematic search and entered 118 effect sizes into a multilevel, random-effects meta-analysis. Analyses revealed an overall negative effect of upward social comparison relative to downward comparison and controls on social media users’ self-evaluations and emotions (g = −0.24, p < .001). Specifically, there were significant negative effects of upward comparison on each outcome variable: body image (g = −0.31, p < .001), subjective well-being (g = −0.19, p < .001), mental health (g = −0.21, p < .001) and self-esteem (g = −0.21, p < .001). This meta-analysis indicates that contrast is the dominant response to upward comparison on social media, which results in negative self-evaluations and emotions.
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- 2023
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10. Objective vs subjective design newness
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Reyhane Hooshmand, Nicole Hartley, Billy Sung, and Eric J. Vanman
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Value (ethics) ,Originality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Perception ,Novelty ,Natural (music) ,General Medicine ,Product (category theory) ,Psychology ,Practical implications ,media_common ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
PurposeThe paper aims to examine whether (1) deviation of design (i.e. objective design newness) is distinct to consumers' perception of design newness (i.e. subjective design newness) and (2) subjective design newness rather than objective design newness evokes the emotion of interest and enhances product evaluation.Design/methodology/approachIn total five sets of quasi-experiments were conducted on the natural manipulations of design newness. Specifically, the first four studies examine consumers' perception of design newness, feeling-of-interest and product evaluation toward old and new Apple's iOS (i.e., iPhone OS) icons when a new Apple's iOS is released. The fifth study generalized the findings to the new design of XiaoMi MiPhone.FindingsAcross five quasi-experimental studies, the authors found that (1) consumers do not necessarily perceive an objectively new design to be subjectively new; (2) subjective design newness, but not objective design newness, evokes interest and (3) interest, in turn, enhances product evaluation and behavioral intention toward an innovation.Research limitations/implicationsThe current finding extended the current literature on design newness by demonstrating that subjective (vs objective) design newness provides a more holistic account of consumers' interest and positive product evaluation toward the innovations.Practical implicationsThe research showed that simply updating or altering the design of a product does not evoke consumers' perception of design newness and positive product evaluation. Instead, designer and managers must explore ways to evoke consumers' perception of novelty, complexity, unfamiliarity, atypicality and difference. Furthermore, the current finding demonstrated that subjective design newness can be used to evoke consumer interest and, therefore, result in positive purchase evaluation.Originality/valueThe current research is the first to examine (1) the difference between objective and subjective design newness, (2) the emotional response toward design newness and (3) the emotion of interest as a mediator that explain the strong relationship between design newness and positive product evaluation.
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- 2021
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11. Seeking Anonymity in Online Spaces: How Anonymous Motivations Predict our Social Media Usage and Online Behavior
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Lewis Nitschinsk, Stephanie J. Tobin, Deanna Varley, and Eric J. Vanman
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- 2022
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12. Social exclusion enhances affiliative signaling
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Michael J. Bernstein, Michael C. Philipp, Lucy Johnston, and Eric J. Vanman
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Male ,Facial expression ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Facial Muscles ,Smiling ,Developmental psychology ,Facial Expression ,Young Adult ,Social Isolation ,Feeling ,Mimicry ,Humans ,Female ,Social exclusion ,Emotion recognition ,Muscle activity ,Social regulation ,Psychology ,Facial electromyography ,media_common - Abstract
Reciprocating smiles is important for maintaining social bonds as it both signals affiliative intent and elicits affiliative responses. Feelings of social exclusion may increase mimicry as a means to regulate affiliative bonds with others. In this study, we examined whether feelings of exclusion lead people to selectively reciprocate the facial expressions of more affiliative-looking people. Participants first wrote about either a time they were excluded or a neutral event. They then classified 20 smiles-half spontaneous smiles and half posed. Facial electromyography recorded smile muscle activity. Excluded participants distinguished the two smile types better than controls. Excluded participants also showed greater zygomaticus major (mouth smiling) activity toward enjoyment smiles compared to posed smiles; control participants did not. Orbicularis oculi (eye crinkle) activity matched that of the smile type viewed, but did not vary by exclusion condition. Affiliative social regulation is discussed as a possible explanation for these effects.
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- 2020
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13. Pathogens and Intergroup Relations. How Evolutionary Approaches Can Inform Social Neuroscience
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Eric J. Vanman and McGovern H
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Individualistic culture ,Social Psychology ,05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Collectivism ,050109 social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Social neuroscience ,Psychological adaptation ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,In-group favoritism ,Psychology ,Sensory cue ,Generative grammar ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Evolutionary and neuroscientific approaches to intergroup bias have been highly generative, but research has yet to consider how these two approaches can build on each other. Here, we review neuroscientific methods findings on intergroup bias. We then review the emerging perspective that views intergroup bias as a psychological adaptation to pressures present in ancestral ecologies. We conclude by considering evidence that collectivist and individualist cultures evolved in response to unique ecological threats. As such, members of each should be differentially susceptible to environmental cues connoting threats to pathogens. We then propose future directions for neuroscientific research that assesses intergroup bias from an evolutionary perspective. Consideration of cultural factors should enable improved understanding of intergroup bias, with proper consideration of how biology and psychology have adapted to the social environments faced in ancestral populations.
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- 2020
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14. Emotion and its Management: The Lens of Language and Social Psychology
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Cindy Gallois, Eric J. Vanman, Katharine H. Greenaway, and Elise K. Kalokerinos
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Research literature ,050101 languages & linguistics ,Linguistics and Language ,Social psychology (sociology) ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Lens (geology) ,Face (sociological concept) ,050109 social psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Education ,Anthropology ,Perception ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
In this paper, we briefly review the large research literature on emotion in social psychology, and show how it is now firmly embedded in language and communication. As a springboard, we look at the history of emotion studies in JLSP. Then, we consider theory and methodology, and evaluate how standard and more recent methods of measurement have led to new ways of looking at the communication of emotion, including in real-life contexts. We conclude with suggestions for a research agenda that takes the study of emotion forward into the heartland of research in language and social psychology.
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- 2020
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15. Gene by environment interactions in intergroup relations
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Hugh T. McGovern and Eric J. Vanman
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- 2022
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16. Negative valence specific deficits in judgements of musical affective quality in alexithymia
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Joel L Larwood, Eric J. Vanman, and Genevieve A. Dingle
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Emotions ,Happiness ,05 social sciences ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Musical ,Emotional processing ,medicine.disease ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Alexithymia ,Emotion perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Affective Symptoms ,Valence (psychology) ,Arousal ,Psychology ,Music ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Alexithymia is characterised by a lack of words for emotional experiences and it has been implicated in deficits in emotion processing. Research in this area has typically focused on judgements of discrete emotions rather than of affect, which is a precursor to emotion construction. In the current study, higher alexithymia was predicted to be related to more neutral judgements of valence and arousal of music representing a range of emotions. Participants (
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- 2020
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17. Using crying to cope
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Leah Sharman, Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets, Genevieve A. Dingle, Eric J. Vanman, and Medical and Clinical Psychology
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coping (psychology) ,endocrine system ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,Crying ,Audiology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,Heart rate ,Respiration ,Sadness ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Stressor ,Cold pressor test ,Middle Aged ,Tears ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
This research tested the hypothesis that emotional crying facilitates coping and recovery, specifically through physiological changes that occur during crying. Female undergraduate students (N = 197) were randomly assigned to either a sad or neutral condition using short videos. Sad videos were selected for their extreme emotion elicitation. We predicted that compared to those who did not cry to the stimuli and those who were exposed to neutral videos, people who cried would (a) be able to withstand a stressful task for longer; (b) show lower levels of cortisol following crying and exposure to the stressor; and (c) have faster recovery (i.e., return to baseline levels of affect). The final groups consisted of the neutral group (n = 65), sad criers (n = 71), and sad noncriers (n = 61). After a 5-min baseline period, participants watched either the sad or neutral videos for 17 min and then completed a physical stressor (cold pressor test). Heart rate and respiration were continuously recorded, whereas salivary samples for cortisol were taken at 4 separate time points during testing. Analyses revealed no differences between the 3 groups in time withstanding the stressor or cortisol changes. Respiration rate, however, increased in the neutral group and noncriers while watching the videos, with criers' respiration remaining stable. Furthermore, heart rate was found to decelerate just before crying, with a return to baseline during the first crying period. These results suggest that crying may assist in generally maintaining biological homeostasis, perhaps consciously through self-soothing via purposeful breathing and unconsciously through regulation of heart rate. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
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18. Interest, But Not Liking, Drives Consumer Preference toward Novelty
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Billy Sung, Eric J. Vanman, and Nicole Hartley
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Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,Novelty ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,050211 marketing ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Preference ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Do consumers really like familiarity and therefore dislike novelty? This is a central question that has resonated through different fields of marketing and psychology. Past research has found that people heuristically associate familiarity to liking, but they also prefer novelty in certain motivational contexts. This paper presents three studies to show that novelty does not result in liking but instead, evokes interest—a similar but functionally different positive affective experience. Specifically, we show that people feel interested toward and therefore favour a product when it is subjectively perceived to be new or said to be new, even when the novel product is objectively identical to its counterpart. Novelty, however, was found to be unrelated to liking. These findings suggest that consumers’ paradoxical tendency to favour both familiarity and novelty is manifested in ways beyond a general emotional valence account. Specifically, familiarity appears to evoke liking whereas novelty appears to evoke interest.
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- 2019
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19. The dark triad and online self-presentation styles and beliefs
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Lewis Nitschinsk, Stephanie J. Tobin, and Eric J. Vanman
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General Psychology - Published
- 2022
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20. Social neuroscience is more than the study of the human brain: The legacy of John Cacioppo
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Eric J. Vanman, Tiffany A. Ito, and Arvid Kappas
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Cognitive science ,Male ,Social Psychology ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Brain ,Development ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social neuroscience ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
John Cacioppo passed away in 2018, leaving a legacy of profound methodological, theoretical, and inferential contributions to social neuroscience. This paper serves as an introduction to the nine articles that comprise this special issue in honor of John Cacioppo's work in social neuroscience. Although he made many contributions to psychology, here we briefly review four milestones in Cacioppo's career that had important implications specifically for the development of social neuroscience today: (1) an early research focus on cardiovascular and facial EMG measurement, (2) the training of others, (3) the importance of sound inference, and (4) the definition of social neuroscience. In sum, we argue that John Cacioppo envisioned social neuroscience as having multiple levels of explanation and requiring multiple kinds of physiological evidence. It is not all just the brain!
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- 2021
21. Tears evoke the intention to offer social support: A systematic investigation of the interpersonal effects of emotional crying across 41 countries
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Tara Bulut Allred, Agustín Ibáñez, Amparo Caballero, Anouk Kolen, Terri Tan Su-May, Shamsul Haque, Elif Gizem Demirag Burak, Jozef Bavolar, Ad J. J. M. Vingerhoets, Phakkanun Chittham, Andreas Schwerdtfeger, Chew Wei Ong, Marie Stadel, Sadia Malik, Coby Morvinski, Victoria Schönefeld, Suzanne L. K. Stewart, John Jamir Benzon R. Aruta, María del Carmen Espinoza, Christine Joy A. Ballada, Darío Páez, Masataka Nakayama, Natália Kocsel, Adolfo M. García, Magdalena Bobowik, Janis Zickfeld, Tuğba Seda Çolak, Hans IJzerman, Jordane Boudesseul, Krystian Barzykowski, Elke Schrover, Gonzalo Martínez-Zelaya, Diogo Conque Seco Ferreira, Sergio Villar, Leigh Ann Vaughn, Leah Sharman, Philip C. Mefoh, Patrícia Arriaga, Inbal Kremer, Tobias Ebert, Franziska A. Stanke, Jonna K. Vuoskoski, Eleimonitria Lekkou, Nao Maeura, Asmir Gračanin, Argiro Vatakis, Kristina Sesar, Mustafa Eşkisu, Yaniv Shani, Kitty Dumont, Bruno Verschuere, Rebecca Shankland, Thomas W. Schubert, Friedrich M. Götz, Agata Blaut, René Šebeňa, Nadyanna M. Majeed, Nino Jose Mateo, Eric J. Vanman, Eunsoo Choi, Pilleriin Sikka, Gyöngyi Kökönyei, Harry Manley, Arta Dodaj, José J. Pizarro, Olivia Pich, Kenichi Ito, Irina Konova, Magdalena Śmieja, Nekane Basabe, Julie Karsten, Braj Bhushan, Catalina Estrada-Mejia, Ljiljana B. Lazarević, Andree Hartanto, Jana B. Berkessel, Peter J. Rentfrow, Pilar Carrera, Sari Mentser, María Josefina Escobar, Uğur Doğan, Sebastian L. Schorch, Niels van de Ven, Anna Tcherkassof, Paul E. Jose, Wee Qin Ng, Wataru Sato, Yukiko Uchida, Sergio Barbosa, Shlomo Hareli, Michelle Xue Zheng, Ravit Nussinson, Igor Kardum, Asil Ali Özdoğru, Yang Wu, Nina F. Balt, Henna-Riikka Peltola, Diogo Martins, Yansong Li, Pavol Kačmár, Zahir Vally, Charles T. Orjiakor, Judith K. Daniels, UAM. Departamento de Psicología Social y Metodología, MÜ, Eğitim Fakültesi, Eğitim Bilimleri Bölümü, Doğan, Uğur, Burak, Elif Gizem Demirağ, Zickfeld, J. H., van de Ven, N., Pich, O., Schubert, T. W., Berkessel, J. B., Pizarro, J. J., Bhushan, B., Mateo, N. J., Barbosa, S., Sharman, L., Kökönyei, G., Schrover, E., Kardum, I., Aruta, J. J. B., Lazarevic, L. B., Escobar, M. J., Stadel, M., Arriaga, P., Dodaj, A., Shankland, R., Majeed, N. M., Li, Y., Lekkou, E., Hartanto, A., Özdoğru, A. A., Vaughn, L. A., del Carmen Espinoza, M., Caballero, A., Kolen, A., Karsten, J., Manley, H., Maeura, N., Eşkisu, M., Shani, Y., Chittham, P., Ferreira, D., Bavolar, J., Konova, I., Sato, W., Morvinski, C., Carrera, P., Villar, S., Ibanez, A., Hareli, S., Garcia, A. M., Kremer, I., Götz, F. M., Schwerdtfeger, A., Estrada-Mejia, C., Nakayama, M., Ng, W. Q., Sesar, K., Orjiakor, C. T., Dumont, K., Allred, T. B., Gra?anin, A., Rentfrow, P. J., Schönefeld, V., Vally, Z., Barzykowski, K., Peltola, H.-R., Tcherkassof, A., Haque, S., mieja, M., Su-May, T. T., IJzerman, H., Vatakis, A., Ong, C. W., Choi, E., Schorch, S. L., Páez, D., Malik, S., Ka?már, P., Bobowik, M., Jose, P., Vuoskoski, J. K., Basabe, N., Doğan, U., Ebert, T., Uchida, Y., Zheng, M. X., Mefoh, P., Šebe?a, R., Stanke, F. A., Ballada, C. J., Blaut, A., Wu, Y., Daniels, J. K., Kocsel, N., Balt, N. F., Vanman, E., Stewart, S. L. K., Verschuere, B., Sikka, P., Boudesseul, J., Martins, D., Nussinson, R., Ito, K., Mentser, S., Çolak, T. S., Martinez-Zelaya, G., Vingerhoets, A., College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Department of Psychology, Department of Marketing, Research Group: Marketing, Tilburg University, Center Ph. D. Students, Tilburg School of Economics and Management, Department of Social Psychology, Medical and Clinical Psychology, [Belirlenecek], Sociology/ICS, and Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology
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Sociology and Political Science ,Emotions ,Personal distress ,Attachment ,050109 social psychology ,Ciências Sociais::Psicologia [Domínio/Área Científica] ,Relaciones interpersonales ,Emotional tears ,Social support ,0302 clinical medicine ,Emotional crying ,Cross-cultural ,Psychology ,Faces ,10. No inequality ,media_common ,Inclusion ,Emociones y sentimientos ,Crying ,05 social sciences ,Impact ,Feeling ,medicine.symptom ,Social psychology ,Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Empathy ,Interpersonal relations ,Equivalence ,050105 experimental psychology ,Exposure ,Interpersonal relationship ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Valence (psychology) ,Empathic concern ,Distress ,Individuals ,Psicología ,Psychologie ,Llanto ,Empatía ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Tearful crying is a ubiquitous and likely uniquely human phenomenon. Scholars have argued that emotional tears serve an attachment function: Tears are thought to act as a social glue by evoking social support intentions. Initial experimental studies supported this proposition across several methodologies, but these were conducted almost exclusively on participants from North America and Europe, resulting in limited generalizability. This project examined the tears-social support intentions effect and possible mediating and moderating variables in a fully pre-registered study across 7007 participants (24,886 ratings) and 41 countries spanning all populated continents. Participants were presented with four pictures out of 100 possible targets with or without digitally-added tears. We confirmed the main prediction that seeing a tearful individual elicits the intention to support, d = 0.49 [0.43, 0.55]. Our data suggest that this effect could be mediated by perceiving the crying target as warmer and more helpless, feeling more connected, as well as feeling more empathic concern for the crier, but not by an increase in personal distress of the observer. The effect was moderated by the situational valence, identifying the target as part of one's group, and trait empathic concern. A neutral situation, high trait empathic concern, and low identification increased the effect. We observed high heterogeneity across countries that was, via split-half validation, best explained by country-level GDP per capita and subjective well-being with stronger effects for higher-scoring countries. These findings suggest that tears can function as social glue, providing one possible explanation why emotional crying persists into adulthood., National Science Centre, Poland; Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange Bekker Programme; Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology; Hungarian National Research, Development and Innovation Office; Hungarian Brain Research Programme; Internal Fund of the Open University of Israel
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- 2021
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22. Tears of sadness reduce others' gazing toward the eyes
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Julie D. Henry, Sarah A. Grainger, and Eric J. Vanman
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genetic structures ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Emotions ,PsycINFO ,Fixation, Ocular ,Eye ,Gaze ,eye diseases ,050105 experimental psychology ,Social relation ,Developmental psychology ,Sadness ,Perception ,Tears ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,sense organs ,Psychology ,Emotional arousal ,Arousal ,General Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Emotional tears enhance perceptions of sadness and promote helping behaviors, but it is yet to be established whether they also influence the way we gaze at emotional faces. This is an important question to address given that how people visually attend to faces plays a critical role during social interaction and may also be used to regulate emotional arousal. We used eye-tracking to quantify the time spent gazing to the eyes and mouths of emotional faces. Participants' (N = 131) gaze patterns were monitored while they viewed stimuli that were manipulated to have tears present or absent. The key finding to emerge was that participants gazed less at the eyes of faces when tears were present compared with absent, suggesting that perceiving tears may be emotionally aversive. These findings are discussed in relation to prior work that suggests eye-gaze is used to regulate emotional arousal. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2020
23. Interaction of stereotypical trustworthiness, facial resemblance, and group membership in the perception of trustworthiness and other traits
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Eric J. Vanman, Elena Tsankova, and Arvid Kappas
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Group membership ,Social Psychology ,Sociology and Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Face (sociological concept) ,020206 networking & telecommunications ,02 engineering and technology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Facial resemblance ,Trustworthiness ,Perception ,Similarity (psychology) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Kinship ,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,First impression (psychology) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Trust begins with our first impression of others. But which matters most in forming the first impression that others possess stereotypically trustworthy facial features, that they look like us, or ...
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- 2018
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24. Physiological and self-reported disgust reactions to obesity
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Eric J. Vanman, Lenny R. Vartanian, Joanne R Beames, Suzanna M. Azevedo, and Tara Trewartha
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Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Emotions ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Body size ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Obesity ,10. No inequality ,Prejudice (legal term) ,Electromyography ,05 social sciences ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Disgust ,Facial Expression ,Face ,Weight stigma ,Female ,Self Report ,Psychology ,Attitude to Health ,Facial electromyography ,Prejudice - Abstract
There is accumulating evidence that disgust plays an important role in prejudice toward individuals with obesity, but that research is primarily based on self-reported emotions. In four studies, we examined whether participants displayed a physiological marker of disgust (i.e. levator labii activity recorded using facial electromyography) in response to images of obese individuals, and whether these responses corresponded with their self-reported disgust to those images. All four studies showed the predicted self-reported disgust response toward images of obese individuals. Study 1 further showed that participants exhibited more levator activity to images of obese individuals than to neutral images. However, Studies 2-4 failed to provide any evidence that the targets' body size affected levator responses. These findings suggest that disgust may operate at multiple levels, and that the disgust response to images of obese individuals may be more of a cognitive-conceptual one than a physiological one.
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
25. Communicating with Robots: What We Do Wrong and What We Do Right in Artificial Social Intelligence, and What We Need to Do Better
- Author
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Rebecca Stower, Eric J. Vanman, and Arvid Kappas
- Subjects
Facial expression ,Social robot ,Human–computer interaction ,Embodied cognition ,Social intelligence ,Computer science ,Robot ,Augmented reality ,Affective computing ,Human–robot interaction - Abstract
Artificial agents, be they virtual agents, or physically embodied devices, such as robots, often require interaction and communication with humans. In addition to the challenge of analyzing human interaction, communication researchers, psychologists, and others are now confronted with new paradigms. Human behavior is not only analyzed, but machines synthesize behavior. Communication is not just observed, but algorithms are employed (in real time) to react to such behaviors. This is a time where social intelligence needs to be put into code and hardware. We discuss the challenges and pitfalls regarding the interaction of humans and machines with a view to (artificial) social intelligence and a time of challenging interdisciplinary research. Concrete examples of such research will be presented and lacunae in empirical data will be pointed out.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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26. 'Danger, Will Robinson!' The challenges of social robots for intergroup relations
- Author
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Arvid Kappas and Eric J. Vanman
- Subjects
Cognitive science ,Social robot ,Social Psychology ,Field (Bourdieu) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Identity (social science) ,050109 social psychology ,Empathy ,Ingroups and outgroups ,050105 experimental psychology ,Robot ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Optimal distinctiveness theory ,Everyday life ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Society's increasing reliance on robots in everyday life provides exciting opportunities for social psychologists to work with engineers in the nascent field of social robotics. In contrast to industrial robots that, for example, may be used on an assembly line, social robots are designed specifically to interact with humans and/or other robots. People tend to perceive social robots as autonomous and capable of having a mind. As such, they are also more likely to be subject to social categorization by humans. As social robots become more human like, people may also feel greater empathy for them and treat robots more like (human) ingroup members. On the other hand, as they become more human like, robots also challenge our human distinctiveness, threaten our identity, and elicit suspicion about their ability to deceive us with their human-like qualities. We review relevant research to explore this apparent paradox, particularly from an intergroup relations perspective. We discuss these findings and propose three research questions that we believe social psychologists are ideally suited to address.
- Published
- 2019
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27. A meta-analysis of the emotional victim effect for female adult rape complainants: Does complainant distress influence credibility?
- Author
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Faye Nitschke, Blake M. McKimmie, and Eric J. Vanman
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Adult ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Forensic and Legal Psychology ,bepress|Law|Law and Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,education ,Poison control ,050109 social psychology ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Forensic and Legal Psychology|Legal ,Psychological Distress ,Suicide prevention ,Judgment ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Honesty ,Criminal Law ,Credibility ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Psychology ,Crime Victims ,media_common ,Plaintiff ,Social perception ,05 social sciences ,PsyArXiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Reporting bias ,Social Perception ,Rape ,bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Female ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Criminal justice - Abstract
Rape cases have a disproportionately high attrition rate and low conviction rate compared with other criminal offenses. Evaluations of a rape complainant's credibility often determine whether a case progresses through the criminal justice system. Even though emotional demeanor is not related to witness honesty or accuracy, distressed rape complainants are perceived to be more credible than complainants who present with controlled affect. To understand the extent and robustness of the influence of emotional demeanor on credibility judgments of female adult rape complainants, we conducted a systematic review, meta-analysis, and p-curve analysis of the experimental simulated decision-making literature on the influence of complainant emotional demeanor on complainant credibility. The meta-analysis included 20 studies with participants who were criminal justice professionals (e.g., police officers and judges), community members, and mock jurors (N = 3128). Results suggest that distressed demeanor significantly increased perceptions of complainant credibility, with a small to moderate effect size estimate. Importantly, the results of p-curve analysis suggest that reporting bias is not a likely explanation for the effect of emotional demeanor on rape complainant credibility. Sample type (whether perceivers were criminal justice professionals or prospective jurors) and stimulus modality (whether perceivers read about or watched the complainant recount the alleged rape) were not found to moderate the effect size estimate. These results suggest that effective methods of reducing reliance on emotional demeanor to make credibility judgments about rape complainants should be investigated to make credibility assessments fairer and more accurate. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
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28. The influence of tears on older and younger adults' perceptions of sadness
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Sarah A. Grainger, Julie D. Henry, Gabriella Matters, and Eric J. Vanman
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Adult ,Male ,Aging ,Social Psychology ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Emotions ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Young Adult ,Face perception ,Perception ,mental disorders ,Sadness ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Young adult ,media_common ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,05 social sciences ,Younger adults ,Facial mimicry ,Tears ,Female ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Psychology ,Facial electromyography ,psychological phenomena and processes ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Prior studies have shown that older adults perceive sadness differently relative to younger adults. However, the stimuli used to test older adults' perceptions of sadness have been limited by the fact that they have not included emotional tears-a salient emotional cue that has previously been shown to enhance perceptions of sadness in younger adults. This study reports three experiments that test whether the presence of tears differentially affects older and younger adults' perceptions of sadness. Experiment 1 was a laboratory-based experiment and also assessed facial mimicry responses using electromyography (EMG). Experiments 2 and 3 were conducted online. Across all three experiments, participants rated faces as showing greater sadness when tears were present compared to absent, and most critically, participant age did not moderate this effect-young and older adults responded equivalently to the presence of tears. Another finding to emerge across all experiments was that older faces were consistently rated as showing more sadness than younger faces, suggesting that there may be a bias toward attributing more sadness to people in older age. The facial EMG data showed that both age groups exhibited greater frowning (relative to smiling) responses when viewing the sad faces, but this effect was not moderated by the presence of tears. Taken together, the data from these three experiments show stability in terms of how younger and older adults respond to the presence of tears; in both age groups, behavioral responses to sadness are equivalently enhanced. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
- Published
- 2019
29. Threats to belonging on Facebook: lurking and ostracism
- Author
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Marnize Verreynne, Eric J. Vanman, Alexander K. Saeri, and Stephanie J. Tobin
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Social Psychology ,Information sharing ,Control (management) ,Ostracism ,Meaning (existential) ,Set (psychology) ,Psychology ,Social psychology - Abstract
We examined two threats to belonging and related needs on Facebook: lurking (Study 1) and ostracism (Study 2). In Study 1, participants were either allowed or not allowed to share information on Facebook for 48 hours. Those who were not allowed to share information had lower levels of belonging and meaningful existence. In Study 2, participants engaged in a laboratory-based Facebook activity. Half of the profiles were set up so that participants would not receive any feedback on their status updates. Participants who did not receive feedback on their updates had lower levels of belonging, self-esteem, control, and meaningful existence. Together, these findings indicate that a lack of information sharing and feedback can threaten belonging needs.
- Published
- 2019
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30. The relationship between testosterone and social cognition in younger and older adults
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Julie D. Henry, Sarah A. Grainger, Eric J. Vanman, and Jessica K. Mead
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Adult ,Male ,Social Cognition ,Aging ,Longevity ,Theory of Mind ,Normal aging ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Social cognition ,Emotion perception ,Theory of mind ,Humans ,Testosterone ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Aged ,Age differences ,General Neuroscience ,05 social sciences ,Testosterone (patch) ,Moderation ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Younger adults ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Testosterone (T) has been linked to poorer social cognition in younger adults. Because social cognition and T both decline with normal aging, a different type of relationship may exist between T and social cognition in late adulthood. To test this possibility, younger and older adults provided a salivary T sample and completed two social cognition tasks. The results showed that age-group was a significant moderator in the relationship between T and theory of mind (ToM) performance for males, such that T was a negative predictor of ToM in younger males and a positive predictor of ToM in older age. No relationships were identified for females. These findings show for the first time that T is differentially related to ToM in the early and later stages of the male adult lifespan, and are discussed in relation to prior work that suggests T may have neuroprotective effects in older age.
- Published
- 2021
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31. The Emotion of Interest and Its Relevance to Consumer Psychology and Behaviour
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Eric J. Vanman, Billy Sung, Ian Phau, and Nicole Hartley
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Marketing ,Economics and Econometrics ,Recall ,Emotion differentiation ,Field (Bourdieu) ,05 social sciences ,Novelty ,050105 experimental psychology ,0502 economics and business ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,Relevance (law) ,050211 marketing ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Consumer behaviour ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Consumers are known to show a paradoxical tendency to favour both familiar and novel marketing stimuli such as products and advertisements. However, an explanation for this paradox has yet to be proposed. This provides immense challenges for marketing practices that conventionally strive to build familiarity (e.g. building awareness, recognition, recall, and customer relationships). Using the emotion differentiation framework, this theoretical paper shows that this paradox is a result of two distinct emotions – liking and interest. Specifically, consumers like familiarity but are interested in novelty. This paper offers six empirical propositions to: (1) differentiate interest from liking; (2) show that liking motivates consumers to favour familiarity whereas interest motivates consumers to prefer novelty; (3) demonstrate that interest accounts for previously explained boundary conditions of the familiarity–liking effect; and (4) provide insights to explain previous conflicting findings in the field of innovation, advertising, and consumer psychology research.
- Published
- 2016
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32. The role of empathy in intergroup relations
- Author
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Eric J. Vanman
- Subjects
Social psychology (sociology) ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Empathy ,Ingroups and outgroups ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Social neuroscience ,Feeling ,Outgroup ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Prejudice ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,General Psychology ,Mirror neuron ,media_common - Abstract
Intergroup empathy - feeling empathy for a person or persons on the basis of group memberships - has been, until lately, relatively neglected by researchers and its mechanisms are poorly understood. What is well established is that people typically display a group bias, such that they more readily have empathy for the pain and suffering of ingroup members than they do for outgroup members. I review current research that attempts to answer four main questions about intergroup empathy: (a) what is the role of empathy in prejudice and prejudice reduction? (b) What are the causes and consequences of counter-empathy? (c) How do mimicry and the mirror neuron system play a role? (d) How does the brain produce intergroup empathy? This review draws mainly from studies in social psychology, developmental psychology, and social neuroscience, reflecting a variety of behavioral and neuroscience measures to examine the interplay between prejudice, empathy, counter-empathy, and mimicry, as well as the brain regions that underlie these processes.
- Published
- 2016
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- View/download PDF
33. How can the word 'NEW' evoke consumers' experiences of novelty and interest?
- Author
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Billy Sung, Ian Phau, Eric J. Vanman, and Nicole Hartley
- Subjects
Marketing ,Subjective perception ,0502 economics and business ,05 social sciences ,Novelty ,050211 marketing ,Cardiac activity ,Product (category theory) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050203 business & management ,Word (computer architecture) ,Arousal - Abstract
This paper examines the role advertising cues play in inducing subjective perceptions of product novelty and how they can evoke consumer interest toward an advertisement. Specifically, it uses behavioral and psychophysiological measures to: (1) investigate the effect of novelty cues on consumers’ subjective appraisal of novelty; (2) demonstrate that novelty cues may evoke the emotion of interest; and (3) differentiate the effect of the emotion of interest on liking and arousal. Across two experimental studies, we demonstrated that simply adding the word “new” in an advertisement increases behavioral (i.e., viewing duration) and psychophysiological responses (i.e., cardiac activity) of interest. However, the word “new” did not evoke liking and arousal. This suggests that novelty cues in an advertisement will make the consumers perceive the product to be novel and further evoke consumer interest.
- Published
- 2016
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34. Intranasal oxytocin does not alter initial perceptions of facial trustworthiness in younger or older adults
- Author
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Julie D. Henry, Eric J. Vanman, Henriette R. Steinvik, and Sarah A. Grainger
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Fixation, Ocular ,Oxytocin ,Trust ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Double-Blind Method ,Perception ,medicine ,Humans ,Pharmacology (medical) ,Mouth region ,Administration, Intranasal ,media_common ,Aged ,Pharmacology ,Aged, 80 and over ,Age Factors ,Eye movement ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Trustworthiness ,Social processes ,Younger adults ,Eye tracking ,Female ,Psychology ,Facial Recognition ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Background: Oxytocin is a neuropeptide involved in a range of social processes, and prior research has shown that intranasal oxytocin (iOT) may enhance trusting behaviors. However, it is unclear whether iOT influences perceptions of whether a face is trustworthy. In addition, no studies in this literature have investigated whether the participant’s age may play a moderating role in the effects of iOT on trust. Aims: We aimed to examine for the first time whether iOT influences perceptions of facial trustworthiness and eye-gaze patterns and, if so, whether age moderates these iOT effects. Methods: One hundred and eighteen participants took part in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, within-groups study. Participants made judgments about the perceived trustworthiness of a series of faces while their eye movements were monitored. Results: Younger and older adults differed in their judgments of facial trustworthiness. However, most critically, iOT had no effect on these judgments for either age group. For the eye-tracking data, prior age effects in attending to the stimuli were replicated, with older adults gazing less at the eye region and more at the mouth region relative to younger adults. However, iOT had no effect on eye gaze. Conclusions: These findings are discussed in relation to the growing body of literature that suggests that the effect of iOT on social processing is complex and may not be as robust as first thought.
- Published
- 2018
35. Does crying help? Development of the beliefs about crying scale (BACS)
- Author
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Leah Sharman, Eric J. Vanman, and Genevieve A. Dingle
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,endocrine system ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Adolescent ,Psychometrics ,Emotions ,050109 social psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Interpersonal communication ,Crying ,050105 experimental psychology ,Developmental psychology ,Young Adult ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Alexithymia ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Interpersonal Relations ,Affective Symptoms ,Big Five personality traits ,05 social sciences ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Exploratory factor analysis ,Confirmatory factor analysis ,Scale (social sciences) ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Factor Analysis, Statistical ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Crying is often considered to be a positive experience that benefits the crier, yet there is little empirical evidence to support this. Indeed, it seems that people hold a range of appraisals about their crying, and these are likely to influence the effects of crying on their emotional state. This paper reports on the development and psychometric validation of the Beliefs about Crying Scale (BACS), a new measure assessing beliefs about whether crying leads to positive or negative emotional outcomes in individual and interpersonal contexts. Using 40 preliminary items drawn from a qualitative study, an exploratory factor analysis with 202 participants (50% female; aged 18-84 years) yielded three subscales: Helpful Beliefs, Unhelpful-Individual Beliefs, and Unhelpful-Social Beliefs, explaining 60% of the variance in the data. Confirmatory factor analysis on the 14-item scale with 210 participants (71% female; aged 17-48 years) showed a good fit to the three factors. The subscales showed differential relationships with measures of personality traits, crying proneness, emotion regulation and expressivity, and emotional identification (alexithymia). The BACS provides a nuanced understanding of beliefs about crying in different contexts and helps to explain why crying behaviour may not always represent positive emotion regulation for the crier.
- Published
- 2018
36. Disgust predicts prejudice and discrimination toward individuals with obesity
- Author
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Eric J. Vanman, Tara Trewartha, and Lenny R. Vartanian
- Subjects
Social Psychology ,Social distance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,050109 social psychology ,Body size ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,humanities ,Disgust ,Developmental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Prejudice ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This study examined the relevance of disgust to evaluations of an obese target person, and the connection between disgust and prejudice toward that person. Participants (n = 598) viewed an image of an obese or non-obese woman, and then evaluated that woman on a number of dimensions (emotions, attitudes, stereotypes, desire for social distance). Compared with the non-obese target, the obese target elicited more disgust, more negative attitudes and stereotypes, and a greater desire for social distance. Furthermore, disgust mediated the effect of the target's body size on all of the outcome variables (attitudes, stereotypes, social distance). Disgust plays an important role in prejudice and discrimination toward individuals with obesity, and might in part explain the pervasiveness of weight bias.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Intranasal oxytocin does not reduce age-related difficulties in social cognition
- Author
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Julie D. Henry, Henriette R. Steinvik, Izelle Labuschagne, Eric J. Vanman, Peter G. Rendell, and Sarah A. Grainger
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Fixation, Ocular ,Oxytocin ,ToM ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Endocrinology ,Cognition ,Double-Blind Method ,Salience (neuroscience) ,Social cognition ,Age related ,emotion recognition ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Attention ,10. No inequality ,Social Behavior ,older adults ,Administration, Intranasal ,Aged ,Emotional Intelligence ,eye-tracking ,Aged, 80 and over ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,05 social sciences ,Gaze ,Younger adults ,intranasal oxytocin ,Visual Perception ,Eye tracking ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Social cognitive theory ,medicine.drug ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Oxytocin is a neuropeptide that plays a key role in social processing and there are several studies suggesting that intranasally administered oxytocin may enhance social cognitive abilities and visual attention in healthy and clinical groups. However, there are very few studies to date that have investigated the potential benefits of intranasal oxytocin (iOT) on older adults' social cognitive abilities. This is a surprising omission, because relative to their younger counterparts, older adults also exhibit a range of social cognitive difficulties and also show differences in the way they visually attend to social information. Therefore, we tested the effect of iOT (24 IU) versus a placebo spray on 59 older and 61 younger adults' social cognitive abilities and visual attention using a double-blind placebo-controlled within-groups design. While iOT provided no overall age-related benefit on social cognitive abilities, the key finding to emerge was that iOT improved ToM ability in both age-groups when the task had minimal contextual information, but not when the task had enriched contextual information. Interestingly, iOT had gender specific effects during a ToM task with minimal context. For males in both age-groups, iOT reduced gazing to the social aspects of the scenes (i.e., faces & bodies), and for females, iOT eliminated age differences in gaze patterns that were observed in the placebo condition. These effects on eye-gaze were not observed in a very similar ToM task that included more enriched contextual information. Overall, these findings highlight the interactive nature of iOT with task related factors (e.g., context), and are discussed in relation to the social salience hypothesis of oxytocin.
- Published
- 2017
38. FightandFlight: Evidence of Aggressive Capitulation in the Face of Fear Messages from Terrorists
- Author
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Aarti Iyer, Shalini Ale, Sarah Esposo, Eric J. Vanman, and Matthew J. Hornsey
- Subjects
Persuasion ,Sociology and Political Science ,Social Psychology ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Face (sociological concept) ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,16. Peace & justice ,Heightened fear ,Fight-or-flight response ,Philosophy ,Clinical Psychology ,Political Science and International Relations ,Terrorism ,The Internet ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology ,Practical implications ,media_common - Abstract
In an era of digital technology and the Internet, terrorists can communicate their threats directly to citizens of Western countries. Yet no research has examined whether these messages change individuals' attitudes and behavior or the psychological processes underlying these effects. Two studies (conducted in 2008 and 2010) examined how American, Australian, and British participants responded to messages from Osama bin Laden that threatened violence if troops were not withdrawn from Afghanistan. Heightened fear in response to the message resulted in what we call "aggressive capitulation," characterized by two different group-protection responses: (1) submission to terrorist demands in the face of threats made against one's country and (2) support for increased efforts to combat the source of the threat but expressed in abstract terms that do not leave one's country vulnerable. Fear predicted influence over and above other variables relevant to persuasion. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
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39. Understanding the power of the picture: the effect of image content on emotional and political responses to terrorism
- Author
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Joanna Webster, Aarti Iyer, Eric J. Vanman, and Matthew J. Hornsey
- Subjects
Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Image content ,Anger ,16. Peace & justice ,Power (social and political) ,Politics ,Feeling ,Terrorism ,Sympathy ,Content (Freudian dream analysis) ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Viewing images of terrorism can have a powerful impact on individuals' emotional and political responses, yet little is known about the psychological processes underlying these effects. We hypothesized that the content of terrorism images will shape viewers' appraisals of the event, which will elicit specific emotions and political attitudes. British citizens viewed photographs of the 2005 London bombings, either focusing on victims or terrorists. Exposure to images of victims increased appraisals of victim suffering, which predicted feelings of sympathy. Exposure to images of terrorists increased appraisals of terrorists as dangerous, which predicted fear; and of the attack as unjust, which predicted anger. Each emotion predicted support for a distinct counterterrorism policy. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
40. Children’s perceptions of the moral worth of live agents, robots, and inanimate objects
- Author
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Madeline Draheim, Mark Nielsen, Matti Wilks, Kristyn Sommer, Jonathan Redshaw, and Eric J. Vanman
- Subjects
Male ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Morals ,050105 experimental psychology ,Human–robot interaction ,Thinking ,Judgment ,Child Development ,Perception ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Child ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Robotics ,Mental life ,Harm ,Moral development ,Child, Preschool ,Robot ,Female ,Moral perception ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
This study examined children’s moral concern for robots relative to living and nonliving entities. Children (4–10 years of age, N = 126) watched videos of six different entities having a box placed over them that was subsequently struck by a human hand. Children were subsequently asked to rate the moral worth of each agent relating to physical harm. Children afforded robotic entities less moral concern than living entities but afforded them more moral concern than nonliving entities, and these effects became more pronounced with age. Children’s tendency to ascribe mental life to robotic and nonliving entities (but not living entities) predicted moral concern for these entities. However, when asked to make moral judgments relating to giving the agent away, children did not distinguish between nonliving and robotic agents and no age-related changes were identified. Moreover, the tendency to ascribe mental life was predictive of moral concern only for some agents but not others. Overall, the findings suggest that children consider robotic entities to occupy a middle moral ground between living and nonliving entities and that this effect is partly explained by the tendency to ascribe mental life to such agents. They also demonstrate that moral worth is a complex multifaceted concept that does not demonstrate a clear pattern across different ontological categories.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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41. The Psychophysiology of Social Action: Facial Electromyographic Responses to Stigmatized Groups Predict Antidiscrimination Action
- Author
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Tracie L. Stewart, R. Toby Amoss, Dominic J. Parrott, Chloe M. Peacock, Lisa Ann Elliott, Brittany A. Weiner, and Eric J. Vanman
- Subjects
Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Collective action ,humanities ,Developmental psychology ,Disadvantaged ,Psychophysiology ,Action (philosophy) ,Voting ,Outgroup ,Psychology ,Facial electromyography ,Social psychology ,Applied Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
We introduced facial electromyography as a tool for predicting advantaged group members' engagement in antidiscrimination action on behalf of a disadvantaged outgroup. Heterosexual men's corrugator supercilii (brow “frowning” muscles) activity while viewing videos of male–male and male–female couples interacting was measured. Corrugator (negative affect) response to male–male versus male–female targets, but not self-reported attitudes toward gay men, predicted number of flyers calling for action to reduce antigay violence and discrimination that participants privately took to distribute. Our discreet behavioral measure mirrored real-life collective action possibilities such as voting against laws prohibiting same-sex marriage in the privacy of one's voting booth.
- Published
- 2013
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- View/download PDF
42. Cognitive empathy and motor activity during observed actions
- Author
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Ross Cunnington, Eric J. Vanman, and Sashenka I. Milston
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Adolescent ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Alpha (ethology) ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Empathy ,Motor Activity ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Electroencephalography ,Developmental psychology ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,Cognition ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Adaptation, Psychological ,medicine ,Humans ,Mirror neuron ,media_common ,Analysis of Variance ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Middle Aged ,Mentalization ,Perspective-taking ,Trait ,Female ,Psychology ,Photic Stimulation ,Follow-Up Studies ,Cognitive psychology ,Mirroring - Abstract
Whether empathy depends on activation of the mirror neuron system is controversial. This study tested the relationship between cognitive empathy and motor activation during action observation through the sensorimotor system. EEG activity was recorded over the motor area while participants observed and then performed a task demonstrated by a model. Analyses revealed significant suppression in mu/alpha (8–12 Hz) and beta (18–22 Hz) EEG bands, indicative of sensorimotor activity, during both observed and executed actions. Crucially, participants rating higher in perspective taking as a measure of trait cognitive empathy showed significantly less beta suppression when observing actions. The direction of this relationship, contrary to studies involving induced emotional empathy, may reflect individual differences in mentalizing and mirroring mechanisms to understand others' actions. Implications of these findings for the hypothesised empathy-mirror neuron system link are discussed.
- Published
- 2013
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43. Coping through crying: A laboratory investigation of the intrapersonal function of tears
- Author
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Leah Sharman, Eric J. Vanman, and Genevieve A. Dingle
- Subjects
Behavioral Neuroscience ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Coping (psychology) ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,Crying ,medicine ,Tears ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Biological Psychiatry ,Clinical psychology ,Intrapersonal communication - Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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44. THE EMOTION OF INTEREST AND ITS RELEVANCE TO THE LIMITS OF FAMILIRITY
- Author
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Billy Sung, Eric J. Vanman, and Nicole Hartley
- Subjects
Relevance (information retrieval) ,Psychology ,Cognitive psychology - Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Social anxiety disorder exhibit impaired networks involved in self and theory of mind processing
- Author
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Zhiliang Long, Heng Chen, Yuyan Chen, Qian Cui, Yajing Pang, Xujun Duan, Wei Zhang, Eric J. Vanman, Yifeng Wang, Huafu Chen, and Qiyong Gong
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Theory of Mind ,social anxiety disorder ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Audiology ,Somatosensory system ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,functional connectivity density ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Theory of mind ,theory-of-mind ,medicine ,Connectome ,Humans ,Right superior temporal gyrus ,In patient ,Anterior cingulate cortex ,Cerebral Cortex ,Social anxiety ,self-processing ,Phobia, Social ,General Medicine ,Original Articles ,Middle Aged ,discriminant analysis ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Self Concept ,030227 psychiatry ,Cognitive inhibition ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Superior frontal gyrus ,Female ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Most previous studies regarding social anxiety disorder (SAD) have focused on the role of emotional dysfunction, while impairments in self- and theory of mind (ToM)-processing have relatively been neglected. This study utilised functional connectivity density (FCD), resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) and discriminant analyses to investigate impairments in self- and ToM-related networks in patients with SAD. Patients with SAD exhibited decreased long-range FCD in the right rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC) and decreased short-range FCD in the right superior temporal gyrus (STG)—key nodes involved in self- and ToM-processing, respectively. Decreased RSFC of the right rACC and STG with widespread frontal, temporal, posteromedial, sensorimotor, and somatosensory, regions was also observed in patients with SAD. Altered RSFC between the right rACC and bilateral superior frontal gyrus, between the right rACC and right middle frontal gyrus, and within the right STG itself provided the greatest contribution to individual diagnoses of SAD, with an accuracy of 84.5%. These results suggest that a lack of cognitive inhibition on emotional self-referential processing as well as impairments in social information integration may play critical roles in the pathomechanism of SAD and highlight the importance of recognising such features in the diagnosis and treatment of SAD.
- Published
- 2016
46. Face age and sex modulate the other-race effect in face recognition
- Author
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Jennifer Seberry Wallis, Ottmar V. Lipp, and Eric J. Vanman
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Adult ,Male ,Aging ,Linguistics and Language ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Affect (psychology) ,White People ,Language and Linguistics ,Developmental psychology ,Race (biology) ,Face perception ,Humans ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,Sex Characteristics ,Racial Groups ,Recognition, Psychology ,Middle Aged ,Ingroups and outgroups ,Sensory Systems ,Pattern Recognition, Visual ,Categorization ,Face ,Outgroup ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,Sex characteristics - Abstract
Faces convey a variety of socially relevant cues that have been shown to affect recognition, such as age, sex, and race, but few studies have examined the interactive effect of these cues. White participants of two distinct age groups were presented with faces that differed in race, age, and sex in a face recognition paradigm. Replicating the other-race effect, young participants recognized young own-race faces better than young other-race faces. However, recognition performance did not differ across old faces of different races (Experiments 1, 2A). In addition, participants showed an other-age effect, recognizing White young faces better than White old faces. Sex affected recognition performance only when age was not varied (Experiment 2B). Overall, older participants showed a similar recognition pattern (Experiment 3) as young participants, displaying an other-race effect for young, but not old, faces. However, they recognized young and old White faces on a similar level. These findings indicate that face cues interact to affect recognition performance such that age and sex information reliably modulate the effect of race cues. These results extend accounts of face recognition that explain recognition biases (such as the other-race effect) as a function of dichotomous ingroup/outgroup categorization, in that outgroup characteristics are not simply additive but interactively determine recognition performance.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Seeing is believing: Neural mechanisms of action-perception are biased by team membership
- Author
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Veronika Halász, Eric J. Vanman, Ross Cunnington, Jason B. Mattingley, and Pascal Molenberghs
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Radiological and Ultrasound Technology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Implicit-association test ,Brain mapping ,Neurology ,Social neuroscience ,Action (philosophy) ,Social cognition ,Perception ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,In-group favoritism ,Neurology (clinical) ,Anatomy ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Mirror neuron ,media_common - Abstract
Group identification can lead to a biased view of the world in favor of "in-group" members. Studying the brain processes that underlie such in-group biases is important for a wider understanding of the potential influence of social factors on basic perceptual processes. In this study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate how people perceive the actions of in-group and out-group members, and how their biased view in favor of own team members manifests itself in the brain. We divided participants into two teams and had them judge the relative speeds of hand actions performed by an in-group and an out-group member in a competitive situation. Participants judged hand actions performed by in-group members as being faster than those of out-group members, even when the two actions were performed at physically identical speeds. In an additional fMRI experiment, we showed that, contrary to common belief, such skewed impressions arise from a subtle bias in perception and associated brain activity rather than decision-making processes, and that this bias develops rapidly and involuntarily as a consequence of group affiliation. Our findings suggest that the neural mechanisms that underlie human perception are shaped by social context.
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- 2012
- Full Text
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48. Emotional Reactions While Watching Graphic Medical Procedures: Vocational Differences in the Explicit Regulation of Emotions1
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Christina H. Vlahou, Eric J. Vanman, and Mary M. Morris
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Social Psychology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,education ,Context (language use) ,Disgust ,Arousal ,Sadness ,Vocational education ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Emotions in the workplace ,Skin conductance ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Clinical psychology ,media_common - Abstract
We examined the role of occupation in how people regulate emotional responses. Graduate nursing students were compared to undergraduate psychology students on self-reported emotional reactions to videos depicting graphic medical procedures. Skin conductance was also recorded. Overall, nursing students reported less disgust and fear, but more sadness while watching the clips, compared to psychology students. The 2 groups did not differ in skin conductance activity when watching a video with no specific instructions. When instructed to suppress or reappraise their emotional reactions to the videos, however, the psychology students showed increases in skin conductance arousal, whereas the nursing students did not. The results are discussed within the context of research on strategies to regulate one’s emotions in the workplace.
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- 2011
- Full Text
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49. On Giving More Light than Heat: The Life and Contributions of John T. Cacioppo (1951 – 2018)
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Gary G. Berntson, Gregory J. Norman, Karen S. Quigley, Tiffany A. Ito, Mary H. Burleson, Bruce D. Bartholow, Catherine J. Norris, Louise C. Hawkley, Eric J. Vanman, Jos A. Bosch, Louis G. Tassinary, and Jeff T. Larsen
- Subjects
Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Psychoanalysis ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Psychology ,Biological Psychiatry - Published
- 2018
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50. Poster Session Abstracts
- Author
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M. Henrion and Eric J. Vanman
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Endocrine and Autonomic Systems ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,General Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Collective responsibility ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Developmental Neuroscience ,Neurology ,Feeling ,Psychology ,Social psychology ,Biological Psychiatry ,Marine transgression ,media_common - Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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