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Neurolinguistics and sub-morphology. From dream to hard reality. ; Neurolinguistique et sub-morphologie. Du rêve à la dure réalité.
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In: https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01914668 ; 2018 (2018)
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FAIRsharing record for: Thesaurus Cognitive psychology of human memory ... : Thesaurus Cognitive psychology of human memory ...
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Bilingual Experience and Executive Control over the Adult Lifespan: The Role of Biological Sex ...
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Bilingual experience and resting-state brain connectivity: Impacts of L2 age of acquisition and social diversity of language use on control networks ...
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Supporting data from Influence of early-life nutritional stress on songbird memory formation ...
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Supporting data from Influence of early-life nutritional stress on songbird memory formation ...
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Data for: Compounding matters: event-related potential evidence for early semantic access to compound words ...
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Data for: Compounding matters: event-related potential evidence for early semantic access to compound words ...
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Structural Brain Changes as a Function of Second Language Vocabulary Training: Effects of Learning Context ...
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Entrainment in Disguise: the Exogenous and Endogenous Cortical Rhythms of Speech and Language Processing ...
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Is 'Sexual' a Sub-type of Disgust, or is it a Separate Basic Emotion?
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Abstract:
Theoretical thesis. ; Bibliography: pages 174-176. ; Chapter 1: introduction and literature review -- chapter 2: priming the three domains of disgust affects lexical decisions in the sexual domain -- chapter 3: the emotional stroop reveals that 'sexual' is more 'taboo' than 'disgusting' -- chapter 4: the neural correlates of words related to pathogen, moral and sexual disgust -- chapter 5: disgust related words evoke different subjective feelings in the body -- chapter 6: general discussion -- appendix. ; Disgust is a crucial emotion that guides a variety of avoidance and rejection behaviours in humans. These avoidance behaviours function to keep us safe from potentially harmful stimuli. A current adaptationist theory proposes three distinct sub-types of disgust based on their unique adaptive function, called the 'Three Domains of Disgust,' (pathogen, moral and sexual) (Tybur et al, 2013). The function of pathogen disgust is to maintain physical health through the avoidance of infectious and disease-causing agents; the function of moral disgust is to maintain group cohesion by avoiding or punishing moral transgressors and the function of sexual disgust promotes reproductive success through the avoidance of unfit mating opportunities. The theory holds that moral and sexual disgust co-opted pathogen disgust mechanisms to solve new adaptive problems. According to discrete emotion theory, subtypes of a basic emotion share: neural profiles, physiological and behavioural signatures. Therefore, if moral and sexual disgust co-opted pathogen disgust mechanisms, then common behavioural and neural mechanisms should emerge in response to stimuli in the three domains. In this thesis, I undertake four experiments to explore the behavioural and neural correlates of the three domains of disgust. I use linguistic stimuli and manipulate the semantic properties of sentences and words such that each category induces disgust, although still resembling its distinct sub-type. Overall, the results from each experiment reveal that the sexual category differs from both pathogen and moral categories. I tentatively propose that the sexual response is not a form of disgust but could be considered a distinct discrete emotion. ; Available in electronic form ; 188 pages illustrations 30 cm
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Keyword:
Aversion -- Physiological aspects; basic emotion theory; Cognitive neuroscience; disgust; moral disgust; Neurophysiology; pathogen; sexual disgust; Sexual excitement
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1267711
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The Neuroanatomy of Speech Sequencing at the Syllable Level ...
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Knowledge and Learning of Verb Biases in Amnesia (Manuscript accepted to Brain & Language) ...
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Modality switch effects emerge early and increase throughout conceptual processing: Evidence from ERPs ...
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Children retain implicitly learned phonological sequences better than adults: A longitudinal study
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