Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2721306378> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2721306378 abstract "One of the crucial features defining basic emotions and their prototypical facial expressions is their value for survival. Childhood traumatic experiences affect the effective recognition of facial expressions of negative emotions, normally allowing the recruitment of adequate behavioral responses to environmental threats. Specifically, anger becomes an extraordinarily salient stimulus unbalancing victims’ recognition of negative emotions. Despite the plethora of studies on this topic, to date, it is not clear whether this phenomenon reflects an overall response tendency toward anger recognition or a selective proneness to the salience of specific facial expressive cues of anger after trauma exposure. To address this issue, a group of underage Sierra Leonean Ebola virus disease survivors (mean age 15.40 years, SE 0.35; years of schooling 8.8 years, SE 0.46; 14 males) and a control group (mean age 14.55, SE 0.30; years of schooling 8.07 years, SE 0.30, 15 males) performed a forced-choice chimeric facial expressions recognition task. The chimeric facial expressions were obtained pairing upper and lower half faces of two different negative emotions (selected from anger, fear and sadness for a total of six different combinations). Overall, results showed that upper facial expressive cues were more salient than lower facial expressive cues. This priority was lost among Ebola virus disease survivors for the chimeric facial expressions of anger. In this case, differently from controls, Ebola virus disease survivors recognized anger regardless of the upper or lower position of the facial expressive cues of this emotion. The present results demonstrate that victims’ performance in the recognition of the facial expression of anger does not reflect an overall response tendency toward anger recognition, but rather the specific greater salience of facial expressive cues of anger. Furthermore, the present results show that traumatic experiences deeply modify the perceptual analysis of philogenetically-old behavioral patterns like the facial expressions of emotions." @default.
- W2721306378 created "2017-06-30" @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5016101936 @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5025353303 @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5042254732 @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5057046897 @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5057084295 @default.
- W2721306378 creator A5061886391 @default.
- W2721306378 date "2017-06-23" @default.
- W2721306378 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W2721306378 title "Evidence for Anger Saliency during the Recognition of Chimeric Facial Expressions of Emotions in Underage Ebola Survivors" @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1547838594 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1863380115 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1964422354 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1966797434 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1969597246 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1970942140 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1987163360 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1989150649 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W1993389465 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2012289576 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2019096742 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2022214793 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2028816106 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2040737492 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2048079178 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2053668814 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2065466930 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2066436980 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2067809668 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2069903116 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2079009661 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2085833198 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2087354143 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2100541875 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2100895432 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2107343775 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2124852035 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2126068118 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2128689362 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2133298436 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2137409775 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2140754550 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2142597810 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2144935848 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2152543364 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2152836667 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2156265515 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2156702515 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2159525731 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2162843378 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2163703047 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2169294293 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2512101833 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2524132203 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2566855717 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W2593397248 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W4230376475 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W4236075498 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W4239078262 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W4243172253 @default.
- W2721306378 cites W4249328408 @default.
- W2721306378 doi "https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.01026" @default.
- W2721306378 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/5482096" @default.
- W2721306378 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28690565" @default.
- W2721306378 hasPublicationYear "2017" @default.
- W2721306378 type Work @default.
- W2721306378 sameAs 2721306378 @default.
- W2721306378 citedByCount "2" @default.
- W2721306378 countsByYear W27213063782019 @default.
- W2721306378 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5016101936 @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5025353303 @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5042254732 @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5057046897 @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5057084295 @default.
- W2721306378 hasAuthorship W2721306378A5061886391 @default.
- W2721306378 hasBestOaLocation W27213063781 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C138496976 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C195704467 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C2776035688 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C2779302386 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C2779812673 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C46312422 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConcept C70410870 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C138496976 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C15744967 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C195704467 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C2776035688 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C2779302386 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C2779812673 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C46312422 @default.
- W2721306378 hasConceptScore W2721306378C70410870 @default.
- W2721306378 hasLocation W27213063781 @default.
- W2721306378 hasLocation W27213063782 @default.
- W2721306378 hasLocation W27213063783 @default.
- W2721306378 hasLocation W27213063784 @default.
- W2721306378 hasLocation W27213063785 @default.
- W2721306378 hasOpenAccess W2721306378 @default.