Friendly drug-dealers and terrifying puppies: Affective primacy can attenuate the N400 effect in emotional discourse contexts
Published 2013 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
Friendly drug-dealers and terrifying puppies: Affective primacy can attenuate the N400 effect in emotional discourse contexts
Authors
Keywords
Discourse, Emotion, ERP, N400, Late positivity, Language
Journal
COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 473-490
Publisher
Springer Nature
Online
2013-04-04
DOI
10.3758/s13415-013-0159-5
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Neural correlates of written emotion word processing: A review of recent electrophysiological and hemodynamic neuroimaging studies
- (2012) Francesca M.M. Citron BRAIN AND LANGUAGE
- Multiple influences of semantic memory on sentence processing: Distinct effects of semantic relatedness on violations of real-world event/state knowledge and animacy selection restrictions
- (2012) Martin Paczynski et al. JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE
- How the Emotional Content of Discourse Affects Language Comprehension
- (2012) Laura Jiménez-Ortega et al. PLoS One
- Will the glass be half full or half empty? Brain potentials and emotional expectations
- (2011) Eva M. Moreno et al. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
- Thirty Years and Counting: Finding Meaning in the N400 Component of the Event-Related Brain Potential (ERP)
- (2010) Marta Kutas et al. Annual Review of Psychology
- Emotionally positive stimuli facilitate lexical decisions—An ERP study
- (2010) Johanna Kissler et al. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
- Neural correlates of cross-domain affective priming
- (2010) Qin Zhang et al. BRAIN RESEARCH
- Establishing Causal Coherence across Sentences: An ERP Study
- (2010) Gina R. Kuperberg et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- The Relationship of Language and Emotion: N400 Support for an Embodied View of Language Comprehension
- (2010) Dorothee J. Chwilla et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- Empathy matters: ERP evidence for inter-individual differences in social language processing
- (2010) Daniëlle van den Brink et al. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
- Anomalies at the Borderline of Awareness: An ERP Study
- (2009) Anthony J. Sanford et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- Imagine that! ERPs provide evidence for distinct hemispheric contributions to the processing of concrete and abstract concepts
- (2009) Hsu-Wen Huang et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Selective Emotional Processing Deficits to Social Vignettes in Schizophrenia: An ERP Study
- (2009) Gina R. Kuperberg et al. SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
- Dysfunction of a Cortical Midline Network During Emotional Appraisals in Schizophrenia
- (2009) Daphne. J. Holt et al. SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
- Generalization and Differentiation in Semantic Memory
- (2008) Matthew A. Lambon Ralph et al. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Emotion and attention in visual word processing—An ERP study
- (2008) Johanna Kissler et al. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
- Emotions in word and face processing: Early and late cortical responses
- (2008) Annekathrin Schacht et al. BRAIN AND COGNITION
- An ERP investigation on the temporal dynamics of emotional prosody and emotional semantics in pseudo- and lexical-sentence context
- (2008) Silke Paulmann et al. BRAIN AND LANGUAGE
- Neurophysiological Correlates of Comprehending Emotional Meaning in Context
- (2008) Daphne J. Holt et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- A cortical network for semantics: (de)constructing the N400
- (2008) Ellen F. Lau et al. NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
- Event related potentials to emotional adjectives during reading
- (2008) Cornelia Herbert et al. PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Create your own webinar
Interested in hosting your own webinar? Check the schedule and propose your idea to the Peeref Content Team.
Create NowAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started