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Original Article

Functional Asymmetry for Facial Affect Perception in High and Low Hostile Men and Women

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Pages 89-97 | Received 04 Jun 1990, Published online: 07 Jul 2009

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Read on this site (11)

Philip C. Klineburger & David W. Harrison. (2015) The dynamic functional capacity theory: A neuropsychological model of intense emotions. Cogent Psychology 2:1.
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Alissa K. Holland, Joseph E. Carmona & David W. Harrison. (2012) An extension of the functional cerebral systems approach to hostility: A capacity model utilizing a dual concurrent task paradigm. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 34:1, pages 92-106.
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Gina A. Mitchell & David W. Harrison. (2010) Neuropsychological effects of hostility and pain on emotion perception. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology 32:2, pages 174-189.
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GinaA. Mollet, DavidW. Harrison, RobertP. Walters & PaulS. Foster. (2007) Asymmetry in the emotional content of lateralised multimodal hallucinations following right thalamic stroke. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry 12:5, pages 422-436.
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GINA A. MOLLET & DAVID W. HARRISON. (2007) EFFECTS OF HOSTILITY AND STRESS ON AFFECTIVE VERBAL LEARNING IN WOMEN. International Journal of Neuroscience 117:1, pages 63-83.
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SUSAN SULLIVAN & TED RUFFMAN. (2004) EMOTION RECOGNITION DEFICITS IN THE ELDERLY. International Journal of Neuroscience 114:3, pages 403-432.
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BRIAN V. SHENAL & DAVID W. HARRISON. (2004) DYNAMIC LATERALIZATION: HOSTILITY, CARDIOVASCULAR REGULATION, AND TACHISTOSCOPIC RECOGNITION. International Journal of Neuroscience 114:3, pages 335-348.
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PAUL S. FOSTER & DAVID W. HARRISON. (2002) THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MAGNITUDE OF CEREBRAL ACTIVATION AND INTENSITY OF EMOTIONAL AROUSAL. International Journal of Neuroscience 112:12, pages 1463-1477.
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Jeffrey Coney & John Fitzgerald. (2000) Gender differences in the recognition of laterally presented affective nouns. Cognition and Emotion 14:3, pages 325-339.
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Helen J Crawford, David W Harrison & Lia Kapelis. (1995) Visual Field Asymmetry in Facial Affect Perception: Moderating Effects of Hypnosis, Hypnotic Susceptibility Level, Absorption, and Sustained Attentional Abilities. International Journal of Neuroscience 82:1-2, pages 11-23.
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Christine L. McDowell, David W. Harrison & Heath A. Demaree. (1994) Is right hemisphere decline in the perception of emotion a function of aging?. International Journal of Neuroscience 79:1-2, pages 1-11.
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Articles from other publishers (20)

Alissa K. Holland, Gina A. Mitchell, Angela Steele, Jessica Bunting & David W. Harrison. (2018) Hostility and cognitive control: Evidence of increased cardiovascular reactivity as a function of exposure to affective stress using a dichotic listening paradigm. International Journal of Psychophysiology 131, pages 57-66.
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David E. Cox, Benjamin B. DeVore, Patti Kelly Harrison & David W. Harrison. (2017) The effect of anger expression style on cardiovascular responses to lateralized cognitive stressors. Brain Informatics 4:4, pages 231-239.
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Robert P. Walters, Patti Kelly Harrison, Ransom W. Campbell & David W. Harrison. (2016) Frontal lobe regulation of blood glucose levels: support for the limited capacity model in hostile violence-prone men. Brain Informatics 3:4, pages 221-231.
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Clinton S Comer, Patti Kelly Harrison & David W Harrison. (2015) The dynamic opponent relativity model: an integration and extension of capacity theory and existing theoretical perspectives on the neuropsychology of arousal and emotion. SpringerPlus 4:1.
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Andrew J. Hughes & Barbara J. Rutherford. (2013) Hemispheric interaction, task complexity, and emotional valence: Evidence from naturalistic images. Brain and Cognition 81:2, pages 167-175.
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Christopher W. Kahler, R. Kathryn McHugh, Adam M. Leventhal, Suzanne M. Colby, Chad J. Gwaltney & Peter M. Monti. (2012) High hostility among smokers predicts slower recognition of positive facial emotion. Personality and Individual Differences 52:3, pages 444-448.
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SHIHO MIYAZAWA & SYOICHI IWASAKI. (2009) Effect of negative emotion on visual attention: Automatic capture by fear‐related stimuli 1 . Japanese Psychological Research 51:1, pages 13-23.
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David E. Cox & David W. Harrison. (2008) Models of anger: contributions from psychophysiology, neuropsychology and the cognitive behavioral perspective. Brain Structure and Function 212:5, pages 371-385.
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Gina A. Mollet & David W. Harrison. (2006) Emotion and Pain: A Functional Cerebral Systems Integration. Neuropsychology Review 16:3, pages 99-121.
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Heath A. Demaree, D. Erik Everhart, Eric A. Youngstrom & David W. Harrison. (2016) Brain Lateralization of Emotional Processing: Historical Roots and a Future Incorporating “Dominance”. Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews 4:1, pages 3-20.
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Matt L Herridge, David W Harrison, Gina A Mollet & Brian V Shenal. (2004) Hostility and facial affect recognition: Effects of a cold pressor stressor on accuracy and cardiovascular reactivity. Brain and Cognition 55:3, pages 564-571.
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Paul S Foster & David W Harrison. (2004) The covariation of cortical electrical activity and cardiovascular responding. International Journal of Psychophysiology 52:3, pages 239-255.
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D. Erik Everhart, Janet L. Shucard, Teresa Quatrin & David W. Shucard. (2001) Sex-related differences in event-related potentials, face recognition, and facial affect processing in prepubertal children.. Neuropsychology 15:3, pages 329-341.
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William D. Scott Killgore. (2016) Sex Differences in Identifying the Facial Affect of Normal and Mirror-Reversed Faces. Perceptual and Motor Skills 91:2, pages 525-530.
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D. Erik Everhart & David W. Harrison. (2013) Facial affect perception in anxious and nonanxious men without depression. Psychobiology 28:1, pages 90-98.
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William D. Scott Killgore & Steven W. Gangestad. (2016) Sex Differences in Asymmetrically Perceiving the Intensity of Facial Expressions. Perceptual and Motor Skills 89:1, pages 311-314.
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D. Erik Everhart, David W. Harrison & W. David CrewsJr.Jr.. (2016) Hemispheric Asymmetry as a Function of Handedness: Perception of Facial Affect Stimuli. Perceptual and Motor Skills 82:1, pages 264-266.
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W. David CrewsJr.Jr. & David W. Harrison. (2016) Cerebral Asymmetry in Facial Affect Perception by Women: Neuropsychological Effects of Depressed Mood. Perceptual and Motor Skills 79:3_suppl, pages 1667-1679.
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W. David CrewsJr.Jr. & David W. Harrison. (2013) Sex differences and cerebral asymmetry in facial affect perception as a function of depressed mood. Psychobiology 22:2, pages 112-116.
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L. S. Billings, D. W. Harrison & J. D. Alden. (2013) Age differences among women in the functional asymmetry for bias in facial affect perception. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31:4, pages 317-320.
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