Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3149654166> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 70 of
70
with 100 items per page.
- W3149654166 abstract "Shyness refers to individual's behavioral inhibition in social situations and a fear for negative evaluation in social situations which is closely associated with social cognition.Face recognition is an important type of social cognitive abilities in social life.In recent years,the majority of the neurophysiologic studies on shyness have focused on the effect of expressional valence and facial new-old effects upon face processing of shy individuals.It has been found that shyness predicted significantly smaller N400 amplitudes in response to anger and to a neutral expression (Marco,et al.,2005).In addition,it has also been reported that there existed greater functional MRI signal response within the amygdala to novel than to familiar faces among healthy young adults who were originally categorized as behaviorally inhibited and temperamentally shy in early childhood (Schwartz,Wright,Shin,Kagan, Rauch,2003).Shy adults exhibited greater bilateral amygdala activation during the presentation of strange faces and greater left amygdala activation during personally familiar faces than their bold counterparts (Beaton,et al.,2008).Although these results revealed that shy individuals and nonshy individuals had cognitive and neural differences in facial expression recognition and old-new face recognition,whether there exist cognitive and neural differences in the basic face recognition ability (e.g.,face and object recognition) between shy and nonshy individuals remains an issue to be examined.This study investigated into N170 component via the face-object recognition tasks in order to explore the neurophysiologic differences in the early face processing between shy and nonshy undergraduates.The subjects were 17 shy undergraduates and 17 nonshy undergraduates.The major findings of the present study were:(1) the level of shyness interacted significantly with the types of stimuli,with the N170 amplitude of shy undergraduates being greater than that of nonshy undergraduates in face recognition,but this difference did not exist in object recognition.(2) There existed a significant effect of types of stimuli,such that the N170 amplitude elicited by face images was higher than that elicited by object images,and the N170 latency elicited by face images was shorter than by object images.(3) There was significant interaction between the hemispheres of the brain and the types of stimuli.Compared with left hemisphere,the N170 amplitude of right hemisphere was greater in face recognition,but the difference wasn't significant between left and right hemisphere in object recognition.The findings of this study suggest that nonshy undergraduates have processing dominance in facial configuration,and the N170 amplitude of the nonshy undergraduates is greater than that of the shy undergraduates in face recognition.N170 is the special component in face recognition.The right hemisphere manifests processing dominance in N170 in face processing." @default.
- W3149654166 created "2021-04-13" @default.
- W3149654166 creator A5082148318 @default.
- W3149654166 date "2010-01-01" @default.
- W3149654166 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W3149654166 title "Differences in Early Face Processing between Shy and Nonshy Undergraduates:Electrophysiological Evidence from an ERP Study" @default.
- W3149654166 hasPublicationYear "2010" @default.
- W3149654166 type Work @default.
- W3149654166 sameAs 3149654166 @default.
- W3149654166 citedByCount "1" @default.
- W3149654166 countsByYear W31496541662019 @default.
- W3149654166 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W3149654166 hasAuthorship W3149654166A5082148318 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C129564537 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C129573333 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C138496976 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C161657702 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C169900460 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C180747234 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C195704467 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C26760741 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C2779144063 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C46312422 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C558461103 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConcept C86658582 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C118552586 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C129564537 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C129573333 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C138496976 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C15744967 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C161657702 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C169760540 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C169900460 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C180747234 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C195704467 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C26760741 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C2779144063 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C46312422 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C558461103 @default.
- W3149654166 hasConceptScore W3149654166C86658582 @default.
- W3149654166 hasLocation W31496541661 @default.
- W3149654166 hasOpenAccess W3149654166 @default.
- W3149654166 hasPrimaryLocation W31496541661 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W1995404922 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W1999154236 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W1999298304 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2020148292 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2052015357 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2053701765 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2054234886 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2056973081 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2078559825 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2084340519 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2086479735 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2123952523 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2157073955 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2164041853 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2261170130 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2521747977 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2803473899 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W2993597941 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W3016452492 @default.
- W3149654166 hasRelatedWork W3148752665 @default.
- W3149654166 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3149654166 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3149654166 magId "3149654166" @default.
- W3149654166 workType "article" @default.