Search Results - "Fenske, Mark J."

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  1. 1

    Motor-response execution versus inhibition alters social-emotional evaluations of specific individuals by Driscoll, Rachel L., Clancy, Elizabeth M., Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Acta psychologica (01-04-2021)
    “…Social-emotional evaluations of unfamiliar people are negatively impacted by ignoring or withholding motor-responses from images that depict them; an effect…”
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  2. 2

    Stimulus-category competition, inhibition, and affective devaluation: a novel account of the uncanny valley by Ferrey, Anne E, Burleigh, Tyler J, Fenske, Mark J

    Published in Frontiers in psychology (13-03-2015)
    “…Stimuli that resemble humans, but are not perfectly human-like, are disliked compared to distinctly human and non-human stimuli. Accounts of this "Uncanny…”
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  3. 3

    Affective Influences of Selective Attention by Fenske, Mark J., Raymond, Jane E.

    “…Processes of selective attention and emotion operate together in prioritizing thoughts and actions. Abundant evidence suggests that emotionally salient stimuli…”
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  4. 4

    Modulation of Focused Attention by Faces Expressing Emotion: Evidence From Flanker Tasks by Fenske, Mark J, Eastwood, John D

    Published in Emotion (Washington, D.C.) (01-12-2003)
    “…Three experiments evaluated whether facial expression can modulate the allocation of focused attention. Identification of emotionally expressive target faces…”
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  5. 5

    Hot or not: response inhibition reduces the hedonic value and motivational incentive of sexual stimuli by Ferrey, Anne E, Frischen, Alexandra, Fenske, Mark J

    Published in Frontiers in psychology (01-01-2012)
    “…The motivational incentive of reward-related stimuli can become so salient that it drives behavior at the cost of other needs. Here we show that response…”
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  6. 6

    The Unengaged Mind: Defining Boredom in Terms of Attention by Eastwood, John D., Frischen, Alexandra, Fenske, Mark J., Smilek, Daniel

    Published in Perspectives on psychological science (01-09-2012)
    “…Our central goal is to provide a definition of boredom in terms of the underlying mental processes that occur during an instance of boredom. Through the…”
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  7. 7

    Selective Attention Determines Emotional Responses to Novel Visual Stimuli by Raymond, Jane E., Fenske, Mark J., Tavassoli, Nader T.

    Published in Psychological science (01-11-2003)
    “…Distinct complex brain systems support selective attention and emotion, but connections between them suggest that human behavior should reflect reciprocal…”
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  8. 8

    Note-taking for the win: Doodling does not reduce boredom or mind-wandering, nor enhance attention or retention of lecture material by Spencer-Mueller, Emily Krysten, Fenske, Mark J

    “…Doodling and fidgeting—traditionally viewed in educational contexts as markers of inattention and poor classroom behaviour—have more recently been considered…”
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  9. 9

    Emotional Devaluation of Distracting Patterns and Faces: A Consequence of Attentional Inhibition during Visual Search? by Raymond, Jane E, Fenske, Mark J, Westoby, Nikki

    “…Visual search has been studied extensively, yet little is known about how its constituent processes affect subsequent emotional evaluation of searched-for and…”
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  10. 10

    The Rise and Fall of Priming: How Visual Exposure Shapes Cortical Representations of Objects by Zago, Laure, Fenske, Mark J., Aminoff, Elissa, Bar, Moshe

    Published in Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) (01-11-2005)
    “…How does the amount of time for which we see an object influence the nature and content of its cortical representation? To address this question, we varied the…”
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  11. 11

    Attentional Inhibition Has Social-Emotional Consequences for Unfamiliar Faces by Fenske, Mark J., Raymond, Jane E., Kessler, Klaus, Westoby, Nikki, Tipper, Steven P.

    Published in Psychological science (01-10-2005)
    “…Visual attention studies often rely on response time measures to show the impact of attentional facilitation and inhibition. Here we extend the investigation…”
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  12. 12

    Suppressing memories of words and familiar objects results in their affective devaluation: Evidence from Think/No-think tasks by De Vito, David, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Cognition (01-05-2017)
    “…Potentially distracting or otherwise-inappropriate stimuli, thoughts, or actions often must be inhibited to prevent interference with goal-directed behaviour…”
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  13. 13

    Information perseveration in recognition memory: Examining the scope of sequential dependencies by Dollois, Michelle A, Fenske, Mark J, Fiacconi, Chris M

    Published in Memory & cognition (09-05-2024)
    “…Models of recognition memory often assume that decisions are made independently from each other. Yet there is growing evidence that consecutive recognition…”
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  14. 14

    Affective evidence that inhibition is involved in separating accessory representations from active representations in visual working memory by De Vito, David, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Visual cognition (14-09-2018)
    “…The multiple state theory of working memory suggests that representations are divided into two states: focused-on active representations and accessory memories…”
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  15. 15

    Subjective Impact of Age-Related Hearing Loss Is Worse for Those Who Routinely Experience Boredom and Failures of Attention by Crawford, Carolyn M.L., Ramlackhan, Kalisha, Singh, Gurjit, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Ear and hearing (01-01-2023)
    “…Despite extensive evidence supporting the benefits of hearing treatments for individuals affected by hearing loss, many leave their hearing issues unaddressed…”
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  16. 16

    Physiological and cognitive measures during prolonged sitting: Comparisons between a standard and multi-axial office chair by Triglav, Joseph, Howe, Erika, Cheema, Jaskirat, Dube, Blaire, Fenske, Mark J., Strzalkowski, Nicholas, Bent, Leah

    Published in Applied ergonomics (01-07-2019)
    “…Prolonged sitting, common in many workplaces, reduces blood flow to the lower limb and has negative health outcomes. CoreChair is an active-sitting chair that…”
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  17. 17

    Neural evidence that inhibition is linked to the affective devaluation of distractors that match the contents of working memory by De Vito, David, Al-Aidroos, Naseem, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Neuropsychologia (01-05-2017)
    “…Stimuli appearing as visual distractors subsequently receive more negative affective evaluations than novel items or prior targets of attention. Leading…”
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  18. 18

    Less approach, more avoidance: Response inhibition has motivational consequences for sexual stimuli that reflect changes in affective value not a lingering global brake on behavior by Driscoll, Rachel L., de Launay, Keelia Quinn, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Psychonomic bulletin & review (01-02-2018)
    “…Response inhibition negatively impacts subsequent hedonic evaluations of motivationally relevant stimuli and reduces the behavioral incentive to seek and…”
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  19. 19

    Response inhibition immediately elicits negative affect and devalues associated stimuli: Evidence from facial electromyography by Clancy, Elizabeth M, Fiacconi, Chris M, Fenske, Mark J

    Published in Progress in brain research (2019)
    “…Response inhibition negatively impacts the emotional and motivational significance of associated stimuli. Current accounts question whether this stimulus…”
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  20. 20

    To be spurned no more: The affective and behavioral consequences of social and nonsocial rejection by Driscoll, Rachel L., Barclay, Pat, Fenske, Mark J.

    Published in Psychonomic bulletin & review (01-04-2017)
    “…Social pain is often associated with social rejection and shares neural correlates with the bothersome aspect of physical pain, which may also indicate an…”
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