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1. Thought habits and processing modes among Japanese university students do not influence dynamic associations between rumination and negative affect

2. Computational analysis of value learning and value-driven detection of neutral faces by young and older adults

3. Development of the RIKEN database for dynamic facial expressions with multiple angles

4. Distinct temporal features of genuine and deliberate facial expressions of surprise

5. Computational Process of Sharing Emotion: An Authentic Information Perspective

6. An Android for Emotional Interaction: Spatiotemporal Validation of Its Facial Expressions

7. The spatio-temporal features of perceived-as-genuine and deliberate expressions.

8. Feedback From Facial Expressions Contribute to Slow Learning Rate in an Iowa Gambling Task

9. Pictorial Referents Facilitate Recognition and Retrieval Speeds of Associations Between Novel Words in a Second Language (L2) and Referents

10. Sound-Symbolic Semantics of Written Japanese Vowels in a Paper-Based Survey Study

11. Viewpoint Robustness of Automated Facial Action Unit Detection Systems

12. Assessing Automated Facial Action Unit Detection Systems for Analyzing Cross-Domain Facial Expression Databases

13. Semantics Based on the Physical Characteristics of Facial Expressions Used to Produce Japanese Vowels

14. Dynamic Displays Enhance the Ability to Discriminate Genuine and Posed Facial Expressions of Emotion

15. Spontaneous Facial Actions Map onto Emotional Experiences in a Non-social Context: Toward a Component-Based Approach

25. Spatio-Temporal Properties of Amused, Embarrassed, and Pained Smiles

26. Fantasy Component of Interpersonal Reactivity is Associated with Empathic Accuracy: Findings from Behavioral Experiments with Implications for Applied Settings

27. Emotion recognition from posed and spontaneous dynamic expressions: Human observers versus machine analysis

28. Social context and culture influence judgments of non-Duchenne smiles

29. Viewpoint Robustness of Automated Facial Action Unit Detection Systems

31. Assessing Automated Facial Action Unit Detection Systems for Analyzing Cross-Domain Facial Expression Databases

32. Distinct temporal features of genuine and deliberate facial expressions of surprise

35. Spontaneous Facial Expressions Reveal New Action Units for the Sad Experiences

36. Spontaneous Facial Expressions Are Different from Posed Facial Expressions: Morphological Properties and Dynamic Sequences

38. Dynamic Displays Enhance the Ability to Discriminate Genuine and Posed Facial Expressions of Emotion

41. Bayesian approaches to statistical modeling in psychology

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