scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | John F Dovidio | |
Marianne LaFrance | |||
Jacqueline S Smith | |||
P2860 | cites work | On the universality and cultural specificity of emotion recognition: a meta-analysis | Q28212643 |
Asymmetrical effects of positive and negative events: the mobilization-minimization hypothesis | Q28297495 | ||
Prejudice at the nexus of race and gender: an outgroup male target hypothesis | Q34118433 | ||
Seeing black: race, crime, and visual processing | Q34376311 | ||
Multiple Cues in Social Perception: The Time Course of Processing Race and Facial Expression | Q36076286 | ||
The NimStim set of facial expressions: judgments from untrained research participants | Q36326996 | ||
Facial resemblance to emotions: group differences, impression effects, and race stereotypes | Q36915860 | ||
Attending to Threat: Race-based Patterns of Selective Attention | Q37078681 | ||
IMAGES OF BLACK AMERICANS: Then, "Them," and Now, "Obama!" | Q37301110 | ||
Treating stimuli as a random factor in social psychology: a new and comprehensive solution to a pervasive but largely ignored problem. | Q38011789 | ||
Evidence for racial prejudice at the implicit level and its relationship with questionnaire measures | Q38457405 | ||
Lost in the categorical shuffle: evidence for the social non-prototypicality of black women | Q39210255 | ||
Development of a FACS-verified set of basic and self-conscious emotion expressions | Q39958021 | ||
Attentional Bias for Threat: Evidence for Delayed Disengagement from Emotional Faces | Q42120985 | ||
The confounded nature of angry men and happy women | Q45198719 | ||
Social categorization and the perception of facial affect: target race moderates the response latency advantage for happy faces | Q46176328 | ||
Race is gendered: how covarying phenotypes and stereotypes bias sex categorization | Q46194752 | ||
Gendered races: implications for interracial marriage, leadership selection, and athletic participation | Q46505990 | ||
The effect of poser race on the happy categorization advantage depends on stimulus type, set size, and presentation duration | Q46888798 | ||
Ambiguity in social categorization: The role of prejudice and facial affect in race categorization | Q46902033 | ||
The processing of invariant and variant face cues in the Garner Paradigm. | Q50624473 | ||
Face gender and emotion expression: are angry women more like men? | Q50712813 | ||
Symmetrical interaction of sex and expression in face classification tasks. | Q50751410 | ||
Facing prejudice: implicit prejudice and the perception of facial threat. | Q51014162 | ||
Laterality for facial expressions: does the sex of the subject interact with the sex of the stimulus face? | Q51141852 | ||
The dissection of selection in person perception: inhibitory processes in social stereotyping. | Q52206421 | ||
Stereotypes as energy-saving devices: A peek inside the cognitive toolbox | Q57255305 | ||
P433 | issue | 1 | |
P304 | page(s) | 83-97 | |
P577 | publication date | 2015-09-15 | |
P1433 | published in | Cognition and Emotion | Q15749526 |
P1476 | title | Categorising intersectional targets: An "either/and" approach to race- and gender-emotion congruity | |
P478 | volume | 31 |
Q39450049 | Facading in transcultural interactions: examples from pediatric cancer care in Sweden |
Q91867699 | The Effects of Facial Attractiveness and Familiarity on Facial Expression Recognition |
Q87998363 | When a face type is perceived as threatening: Using general recognition theory to understand biased categorization of Afrocentric faces |
Search more.