Children prioritize what they hear over what they see when gauging emotional aspects of their experience
(2021)
Newspaper / Magazine
Fadelli, I., & Ross, P. (2021). Children prioritize what they hear over what they see when gauging emotional aspects of their experience
Outputs (23)
Children cannot ignore what they hear: Incongruent emotional information leads to an auditory dominance in children (2021)
Journal Article
Ross, P., Atkins, B., Allison, L., Simpson, H., Duffell, C., Williams, M., & Ermolina, O. (2021). Children cannot ignore what they hear: Incongruent emotional information leads to an auditory dominance in children. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 204, Article 105068. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2020.105068Effective emotion recognition is imperative to successfully navigating social situations. Research suggests differing developmental trajectories for the recognition of bodily and vocal emotion, but emotions are usually studied in isolation and rarely... Read More about Children cannot ignore what they hear: Incongruent emotional information leads to an auditory dominance in children.
Expanding simulation models of emotional understanding: The case for different modalities, body-state simulation prominence and developmental trajectories (2020)
Journal Article
Ross, P., & Atkinson, A. (2020). Expanding simulation models of emotional understanding: The case for different modalities, body-state simulation prominence and developmental trajectories. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00309Recent models of emotion recognition suggest that when people perceive an emotional expression, they partially activate the respective emotion in themselves, providing a basis for the recognition of that emotion. Much of the focus of these models and... Read More about Expanding simulation models of emotional understanding: The case for different modalities, body-state simulation prominence and developmental trajectories.
A Dynamic Body-Selective Area Localizer for use in fMRI (2020)
Journal Article
Ross, P., de Gelder, B., Crabbe, F., & Grosbras, M.-H. (2020). A Dynamic Body-Selective Area Localizer for use in fMRI. MethodsX, 7, Article 100801. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mex.2020.100801Functional localizers allow the definition of regions of interest in the human brain that cannot be delineated by anatomical markers alone. To date, when localizing the body-selective areas of the visual cortex using fMRI, researchers have used stati... Read More about A Dynamic Body-Selective Area Localizer for use in fMRI.
Removing hand form information specifically impairs emotion recognition for fearful and angry body stimuli (2019)
Journal Article
Ross, P., & Flack, T. (2020). Removing hand form information specifically impairs emotion recognition for fearful and angry body stimuli. Emotion, 49(1), 98-112. https://doi.org/10.1177/0301006619893229Emotion perception research has largely been dominated by work on facial expressions, but emotion is also strongly conveyed from the body. Research exploring emotion recognition from the body tends to refer to “the body” as a whole entity. However, t... Read More about Removing hand form information specifically impairs emotion recognition for fearful and angry body stimuli.
The Visual Word Form Area natively processes shape sequences: Implications for developmental dyslexia (2019)
Journal Article
Whitney, C., Ross, P., Zhou, Z., & Strother, L. The Visual Word Form Area natively processes shape sequences: Implications for developmental dyslexia. https://doi.org/10.31234/osf.io/vr58g. Manuscript submitted for publicationThe Visual Word Form Area (VWFA) is a cortical region that adapts to support fluent word recognition. Surprisingly, the region of ventrolateral occipitotemporal cortex that becomes VWFA is specialized for processing the motion of inanimate objects th... Read More about The Visual Word Form Area natively processes shape sequences: Implications for developmental dyslexia.
Emotion Modulation of Body-Selective Areas in the Developing Brain (2019)
Journal Article
Ross, P., de Gelder, B., Crabbe, F., & Grosbras, M. (2019). Emotion Modulation of Body-Selective Areas in the Developing Brain. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience, 38, Article 100660. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dcn.2019.100660Emotions are strongly conveyed by the human body and the ability to recognize emotions from body posture or movement is still developing through childhood and adolescence. To date, very few studies have explored how these behavioural observations are... Read More about Emotion Modulation of Body-Selective Areas in the Developing Brain.
Categorical emotion recognition from voice improves during childhood and adolescence (2018)
Journal Article
Grosbras, M., Ross, P., & Belin, P. (2018). Categorical emotion recognition from voice improves during childhood and adolescence. Scientific Reports, 8(1), Article 14791. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-32868-3Converging evidence demonstrates that emotion processing from facial expressions continues to improve throughout childhood and part of adolescence. Here we investigated whether this is also the case for emotions conveyed by non-linguistic vocal expre... Read More about Categorical emotion recognition from voice improves during childhood and adolescence.
Body-selective areas in the visual cortex are less active in children than in adults (2014)
Journal Article
Ross, P., de Gelder, B., Crabbe, F., & Grosbras, M. (2014). Body-selective areas in the visual cortex are less active in children than in adults. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8, Article 941. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2014.00941Our ability to read other people’s non-verbal signals gets refined throughout childhood and adolescence. How this is paralleled by brain development has been investigated mainly with regards to face perception, showing a protracted functional develop... Read More about Body-selective areas in the visual cortex are less active in children than in adults.
Body form and body motion processing are dissociable in the visual pathways (2014)
Journal Article
Ross, P. (2014). Body form and body motion processing are dissociable in the visual pathways. Frontiers in Psychology, 5, Article 767. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00767