Human (Homo sapiens) and baboon (Papio papio) chimeric face processing: Right-hemisphere involvement (original) (raw)
Human (Homo sapiens) and baboon (Papio papio) chimeric face processing: Right-hemisphere involvement": Correction to Wallez and Vauclair (2013)
Jacques Vauclair
Journal of Comparative Psychology, 2013
View PDFchevron_right
Right hemisphere dominance for emotion processing in baboons
Jacques Vauclair
Brain and Cognition, 2011
View PDFchevron_right
Emotion Processing in Chimeric Faces: Hemispheric Asymmetries in Expression and Recognition of Emotions
Polly Guimarães
View PDFchevron_right
Neuropsychological aspects of facial asymmetry during emotional expression: A review of the normal adult literature
Joan Borod
Neuropsychology Review, 1997
View PDFchevron_right
The relationship of hemispheric preference, as measured by conjugate lateral eye movements, to accuracy of emotional facial expression
Michael Natale
Motivation and Emotion, 1979
View PDFchevron_right
Human Facial Expressions Are Organized Functionally across the Upper-Lower Facial Axis
Marilee Monnot
The Neuroscientist, 2007
View PDFchevron_right
Hemispheric asymmetries in processing emotional expressions
Ruben Gur
Neuropsychologia, 1983
View PDFchevron_right
Facial asymmetry while posing positive and negative emotions: Support for the right hemisphere hypothesis
Joan Borod
Neuropsychologia, 1988
View PDFchevron_right
Effects of brain laterality on accuracy of decoding facial displays of emotion
Kory Floyd
Communication Quarterly, 2003
View PDFchevron_right
Perceived differences between chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) and human (Homo sapiens) facial expressions are related to emotional interpretation.
Marcia Smith Pasqualini, Kim Bard
2007
View PDFchevron_right
Neurophysiological evidence (ERPs) for hemispheric processing of facial expressions of emotions: Evidence from whole face and chimeric face stimuli
Dawn Watling
Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition
View PDFchevron_right
Neuroanatomical Basis of Facial Expression in Monkeys, Apes, and Humans
ralph holloway
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2006
View PDFchevron_right
Lateral asymmetry in intensity of emotional expression
Harold Sackeim
Neuropsychologia, 1978
View PDFchevron_right
Facedness and emotion related to lateral dominance, sex and expression type
Joan Borod
Neuropsychologia, 1980
View PDFchevron_right
Hemispheric specialization displayed by man but not macaques for analysis of faces
William Overman
Neuropsychologia, 1982
View PDFchevron_right
Ratings of emotion in faces are influenced by the visual field to which stimuli are presented*1
Clifford Saron
Brain and Cognition, 1987
View PDFchevron_right
Patterns of Perceptual Asymmetry in Processing Facial Expression
Svein Magnussen
Cortex, 1994
View PDFchevron_right
Ratings of emotion in faces are influenced by the visual field to which stimuli are presented
Clifford Saron
Brain and Cognition, 1987
View PDFchevron_right
Laterality effect on emotional faces processing: ALE meta-analysis of evidence
Francesco Carletti
Neuroscience Letters, 2009
View PDFchevron_right
Left hemisphere representations of emotional facial expressions
L. Nisenson
Neuropsychologia, 1996
View PDFchevron_right
Asymmetry in face processing during childhood measured with chimeric faces
Olivier Pascalis
Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition, 2010
View PDFchevron_right
Perceptual and conceptual organization of facial emotions: Hemispheric differences
Nancy Etcoff
Brain and Cognition, 1984
View PDFchevron_right
On Prototypical Facial Expressions Versus Variation in Facial Behavior: What Have We Learned on the “Visibility” of Emotions from Measuring Facial Actions in Humans and Apes
Augusta Gaspar, Patricia Arriaga, Francisco Esteves
View PDFchevron_right
The Emotional Expressions and Emotion Perception in Nonhuman Primates
Mariska Kret
2022
View PDFchevron_right
Gaspar, A., Esteves, F., & Arriaga, P. (2014). On prototypical facial expressions vs variation in facial behavior: lessons learned on the “visibility” of emotions from measuring facial actions in humans and apes. The Evolution of Social Communication in Primates (pp.101-126). New York: Springer.
Patricia Arriaga
View PDFchevron_right
Emotional Facial Expressive and Discriminative Performance and Lateralization in Normal Young Adults
Robert Proulx
Cortex, 1988
View PDFchevron_right
Levels of emotional awareness and the degree of right hemispheric dominance in the perception of facial emotion
Padmini Shamasundara
Neuropsychologia, 1995
View PDFchevron_right
Patterns of brain asymmetry in the perception of positive and negative facial expressions
José Antonio Aznar-Casanova
Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition, 2009
View PDFchevron_right
Specialized face processing and hemispheric asymmetry in man and monkey: Evidence from single unit and reaction time studies
David Perrett
Behavioural Brain Research, 1988
View PDFchevron_right
Facial asymmetry in posed and spontaneous expressions of emotion
Joan Borod
Brain and Cognition, 1983
View PDFchevron_right
First evidence of population-level oro-facial asymmetries during the production of distress calls by macaque (Macaca mulatta) and baboon (Papio anubis) infants
Jacques Vauclair
Behavioural Brain Research, 2012
View PDFchevron_right
Brain lateralization of holistic versus analytic processing of emotional facial expressions
DAVID MENDOZA BELTRAN
NeuroImage, 2014
View PDFchevron_right
Differences in asymmetric perception of facial expression in Free-Vision Chimeric stimuli and reaction time
Sten Levander
Brain and Cognition, 1990
View PDFchevron_right
Lateralized hybrid faces: Evidence of a valence-specific bias in the processing of implicit emotions
Bruno Laeng, Giulia Prete
Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition, 2014
View PDFchevron_right