ZTE Communications ›› 2017, Vol. 15 ›› Issue (S2): 3-10.DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.1673-5188.2017.S2.001
收稿日期:
2017-08-02
出版日期:
2017-12-25
发布日期:
2020-04-16
LI Wen
Received:
2017-08-02
Online:
2017-12-25
Published:
2020-04-16
About author:
LI Wen (wenli@psy.fsu.edu) is an associate professor of Psychology and Neuroscience and the director of the Cognitive Affective Neuroscience Laboratory, Florida State University, USA. She received her Ph. D. in psychology from Northwestern University (USA) in 2004 and completed postdoctoral training in neuroscience at the Medical School of Northwestern University in 2008. Her research centers on the interaction between emotion and cognition and their implications in psychopathology. Dr. LI has won multiple awards including a Moskowitz Jacobs Inc. Award (equivalent to Young Investigator Award) from the Association for Chemoreception Sciences. She had received research support from the National Institute of Health (R01) and the Department of Defense. Dr. LI currently serves as a standing member of the Cognition ad Perception Study Section for the National Institute of Health, USA.
Supported by:
. [J]. ZTE Communications, 2017, 15(S2): 3-10.
LI Wen. How Do Humans Perceive Emotion?[J]. ZTE Communications, 2017, 15(S2): 3-10.
Figure 1. The time course of human emotion perception. a) The GFP demonstrates five critical ERPs evoked by faces. b) Evoked P1 at the occipital midline by the neutral face and six levels of fear (15%-45% in increments of 6%). c) Three ERPs evoked at the parietal midline by the faces. d) Psychometric and neurometric modeling of fear detection performance and ERPs in a fear detection task maps out four key operations unfolding in sequence, emotion categorization, detection, valuation and conscious awareness. Adapted from Forscher et al., 2016.
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