Literature DB >> 21768206

Look out for strangers! Sustained neural activity during visual working memory maintenance of other-race faces is modulated by implicit racial prejudice.

Paola Sessa1, Silvia Tomelleri, Roy Luria, Luigi Castelli, Michael Reynolds, Roberto Dell'Acqua.   

Abstract

We tested the ability of white participants to encode and retain over a brief period of time information about the identity of white and black people, using faces as stimuli in a standard change detection task and tracking neural activity using electroencephalography. Neural responses recorded over the posterior parietal cortex reflecting visual working memory activity increased in amplitude as a function of the number of faces that had to be maintained in memory. Critically, these memory-related neural responses varied as a function of participants' implicit racial prejudice toward black people. High-prejudiced participants encoded black people faces with a lower degree of precision compared to low-prejudiced participants, suggesting that the class of mental operations affected by implicit racial prejudice includes basic cognitive mechanisms underpinning the encoding and maintenance of faces' visual representations in visual working memory.
© The Author (2011). Published by Oxford University Press.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21768206      PMCID: PMC3304482          DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsr011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci        ISSN: 1749-5016            Impact factor:   3.436


  31 in total

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8.  Orienting attention to objects in visual short-term memory.

Authors:  Roberto Dell'Acqua; Paola Sessa; Paolo Toffanin; Roy Luria; Pierre Jolicoeur
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9.  Neural measures reveal individual differences in controlling access to working memory.

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  10 in total

1.  Taking one's time in feeling other-race pain: an event-related potential investigation on the time-course of cross-racial empathy.

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2.  Individual differences in anxiety predict neural measures of visual working memory for untrustworthy faces.

Authors:  Federica Meconi; Roy Luria; Paola Sessa
Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2014-02-03       Impact factor: 3.436

3.  Blocking facial mimicry during binocular rivalry modulates visual awareness of faces with a neutral expression.

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4.  An unpleasant emotional state reduces working memory capacity: electrophysiological evidence.

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5.  A Memory Computational Basis for the Other-Race Effect.

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Review 6.  Visual Working Memory for Faces and Facial Expressions as a Useful "Tool" for Understanding Social and Affective Cognition.

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7.  Self-face Captures, Holds, and Biases Attention.

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8.  Cognitive control, attention, and the other race effect in memory.

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9.  Neural measures of the causal role of observers' facial mimicry on visual working memory for facial expressions.

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Journal:  Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci       Date:  2018-12-04       Impact factor: 3.436

10.  Attention and Working Memory Biases to Black and Asian Faces During Intergroup Contexts.

Authors:  Guadalupe D S Gonzalez; David M Schnyer
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  10 in total

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