All Stories

  1. Emotional facial expressions evoke faster orienting responses, but weaker emotional responses at neural and behavioural levels compared to scenes: A simultaneous EEG and facial EMG study
  2. Hierarchy and dynamics of self-referential processing: The non-personal Me1 and the personal Me2 elicited via single words
  3. Using the Startle Eye-Blink to Measure Affect in Players
  4. Towards Alternative Ways to Measure Attitudes Related to Consumption: Introducing Startle Reflex Modulation
  5. Emotion Is not What You Think It Is: Startle Reflex Modulation (SRM) as a Measure of Affective Processing in NeuroIS
  6. The human mind and the behavior it generates are relevant to everything that is important: Psychology is more crucial than ever before
  7. Consumer neuroscience to inform consumers—physiological methods to identify attitude formation related to over-consumption and environmental damage
  8. Editorial: The Future of Psychology as an Open Access Journal Welcoming Applied Neuroscience
  9. Clinical Neuroscience—Towards a Better Understanding of Non-Conscious versus Conscious Processes Involved in Impulsive Aggressive Behaviours and Pornography Viewership
  10. Towards improved ways of knowing children with profound multiple disabilities: Introducing startle reflex modulation
  11. Robot emotions generated and modulated by visual features of the environment
  12. Neuroimaging Helps to Clarify Brain Affective Processing Without Necessarily Clarifying Emotions
  13. Neuroimaging for the Affective Brain Sciences, and Its Role in Advancing Consumer Neuroscience
  14. Objective Measures Within Consumer Neuroscience
  15. The neural correlates of emotion ownership using biologically relevant emotional stimuli
  16. When compulsive and impulsive people make financial decisions their brain activity differs
  17. What is an emotion in the first place? Time to sort things out
  18. Emotion Ownership: Different Effects on Explicit Ratings and Implicit Responses
  19. Modulation of the Startle Reflex during Brief and Sustained Exposure to Emotional Pictures
  20. Implicit versus explicit measures of emotion processing in people with aggressive and impulsive tendencies and those who use pornography
  21. Behavioural correlates of brain activity during Self- versus Other- referential emotion processing depend on emotion awareness
  22. Biologically relevant emotion processing does not interfere with Self- versus Other- referenced emotion discrimination: An Electroencephalography study
  23. We can’t help but think of ourselves: A simultaneous EEG and EMG study on the automaticity of Self-referential emotion processing
  24. Bottle Shape Elicits Gender-Specific Emotion: A Startle Reflex Modulation Study
  25. Modulation of spontaneous emotional facial expressions during modality-specific emotion processing: A simultaneous EEG and EMG study
  26. Non-Conscious Brain Processes Revealed by Magnetoencephalography (MEG)
  27. Objective Measures of Emotion Related to Brand Attitude: A New Way to Quantify Emotion-Related Aspects Relevant to Marketing
  28. Dysfunctional Incidental Olfaction in Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI): An Electroencephalography (EEG) Study
  29. Objective Measures of Emotion During Virtual Walks through Urban Environments
  30. Odours Influence Visually Induced Emotion: Behavior and Neuroimaging
  31. Dissociation of reversal- and motor-related delta- and alpha-band responses during visual multistable perception
  32. Food-Evoked Changes in Humans
  33. A gender difference related to the effect of a background odor: a magnetoencephalographic study
  34. Change detection related to peripheral facial expression: an electroencephalography study
  35. Multiple aspects related to self-awareness and the awareness of others: an electroencephalography study
  36. Self-awareness and the subconscious effect of personal pronouns on word encoding: A magnetoencephalography (MEG) study
  37. How chemical information processing interferes with face processing: a magnetoencephalographic study
  38. The lack of focused anticipation of verbal information in stutterers: a magnetoencephalographic study
  39. Scaling laws and persistence in human brain activity
  40. Olfaction and face encoding in humans: a magnetoencephalographic study
  41. Olfaction and Depth of Word Processing: A Magnetoencephalographic Study
  42. Evidence of conscious and subconscious olfactory information processing during word encoding: a magnetoencephalographic (MEG) study
  43. Physiological evidence of gender differences in word recognition: a magnetoencephalographic (MEG) study
  44. False recognition depends on depth of prior word processing: a magnetoencephalographic (MEG) study
  45. A medial to lateral shift in pre-movement cortical activity in hemi-Parkinson's disease
  46. Left Temporal and Temporoparietal Brain Activity Depends on Depth of Word Encoding: A Magnetoencephalographic Study in Healthy Young Subjects
  47. False recognition in a verbal memory task: an event-related potential study
  48. Different forms of human odor memory: a developmental study
  49. Implicit memory within a word recognition task: an event-related potential study in human subjects
  50. Event-related potential correlates of false recognitions of faces
  51. Spectral Sensitivity of Single Photoreceptor Cells in the Eyes of the Ctenid Spicier Cupiennius salei Keys
  52. Development of Odor Naming and Odor Memory from Childhood to Young Adulthood