Pages that link to "Q34660077"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to The cross-category effect: mere social categorization is sufficient to elicit an own-group bias in face recognition (Q34660077):
Displaying 50 items.
- A Price Paid for Our Internal Strife: Escalated Intragroup Aggression and the Evolution of Ingroup Derogation (Q27303782) (← links)
- Matching Faces with Emotional Expressions (Q27500432) (← links)
- Swiss identity smells like chocolate: Social identity shapes olfactory judgments (Q28597783) (← links)
- Behavioral immune system and ingroup derogation: the effects of infectious diseases on ingroup derogation attitudes (Q28651194) (← links)
- Balanced identity in the minimal groups paradigm (Q28660914) (← links)
- Speak My Language and I Will Remember Your Face Better: An ERP Study (Q30355847) (← links)
- What drives social in-group biases in face recognition memory? ERP evidence from the own-gender bias. (Q30413285) (← links)
- Differences in anticipated interaction drive own group biases in face memory (Q31153161) (← links)
- The composite task reveals stronger holistic processing in children than adults for child faces (Q33488552) (← links)
- Attentional prioritization of infant faces is limited to own-race infants (Q33687104) (← links)
- Looking the Other Way: The Role of Gaze Direction in the Cross-race Memory Effect (Q33693980) (← links)
- Putting a face in its place: in- and out-group membership alters the N170 response (Q33878216) (← links)
- Right wing authoritarianism is associated with race bias in face detection (Q33887967) (← links)
- Brain activation during upright and inverted encoding of own- and other-age faces: ERP evidence for an own-age bias (Q33967738) (← links)
- On the other side of the fence: effects of social categorization and spatial grouping on memory and attention for own-race and other-race faces (Q34122202) (← links)
- Both children and adults scan faces of own and other races differently (Q34123016) (← links)
- The role of face shape and pigmentation in other-race face perception: an electrophysiological study (Q34162035) (← links)
- I undervalue you but I need you: the dissociation of attitude and memory toward in-group members (Q34193560) (← links)
- Do congenital prosopagnosia and the other-race effect affect the same face recognition mechanisms? (Q34264163) (← links)
- Individual differences in holistic processing predict the own-race advantage in recognition memory (Q34339777) (← links)
- The effects of prediction on the perception for own-race and other-race faces (Q34572285) (← links)
- With age comes representational wisdom in social signals. (Q34611593) (← links)
- WHAT PREDICTS THE OWN-AGE BIAS IN FACE RECOGNITION MEMORY? (Q34670059) (← links)
- Why Some Faces won't be Remembered: Brain Potentials Illuminate Successful Versus Unsuccessful Encoding for Same-Race and Other-Race Faces. (Q34674883) (← links)
- Class, race, and the face: social context modulates the cross-race effect in face recognition (Q34739487) (← links)
- Visual scanning and recognition of Chinese, Caucasian, and racially ambiguous faces: contributions from bottom-up facial physiognomic information and top-down knowledge of racial categories (Q35019831) (← links)
- Sequential effects in judgements of attractiveness: the influences of face race and sex. (Q35070075) (← links)
- Neural correlates of the in-group memory advantage on the encoding and recognition of faces (Q35072906) (← links)
- The role of features and configural processing in face-race classification (Q35577617) (← links)
- No Own-Age Advantage in Children's Recognition of Emotion on Prototypical Faces of Different Ages. (Q35610758) (← links)
- A comparative study of face processing using scrambled faces (Q35742911) (← links)
- How Well Do Computer-Generated Faces Tap Face Expertise? (Q35831844) (← links)
- Artificial faces are harder to remember (Q35859823) (← links)
- Social Groups Prioritize Selective Attention to Faces: How Social Identity Shapes Distractor Interference (Q36111370) (← links)
- Not so black and white: memory for ambiguous group members (Q37112396) (← links)
- Detecting Superior Face Recognition Skills in a Large Sample of Young British Adults (Q37273271) (← links)
- Striatal Associative Learning Signals Are Tuned to In-groups (Q37304317) (← links)
- Is social categorization based on relational ingroup/outgroup opposition? A meta-analysis (Q37318444) (← links)
- Multiracial faces: How categorization affects memory at the boundaries of race (Q37360452) (← links)
- Visual expertise does not predict the composite effect across species: a comparison between spider (Ateles geoffroyi) and rhesus (Macaca mulatta) monkeys (Q37440544) (← links)
- Social psychophysics: using psychophysics to answer "social" questions with PsychoPro (Q37545147) (← links)
- Mnemonic discrimination of similar face stimuli and a potential mechanism for the "other race" effect (Q37568740) (← links)
- Age biases in face processing: the effects of experience across development (Q37944333) (← links)
- The face and person perception: insights from social cognition (Q37944337) (← links)
- Connecting developmental trajectories: biases in face processing from infancy to adulthood. (Q38019873) (← links)
- Face-space: A unifying concept in face recognition research. (Q38271777) (← links)
- Why Some Faces will Not be Remembered: Current ERP Evidence on Memory Encoding for Other-Race and Other-Age Faces (Q38345996) (← links)
- Barack Obama or Barry Dunham? The appearance of multiracial faces is affected by the names assigned to them (Q38385081) (← links)
- Inconsistent individual personality description eliminates the other-race effect. (Q38488280) (← links)
- The Neuroscience of Intergroup Relations: An Integrative Review (Q38546881) (← links)