TY - JOUR A1 - Reuss, Heiko A1 - Kiesel, Andrea A1 - Kunde, Wilfried A1 - Wühr, Peter T1 - A cue from the unconscious - masked symbols prompt spatial anticipation JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Anticipating where an event will occur enables us to instantaneously respond to events that occur at the expected location. Here we investigated if such spatial anticipations can be triggered by symbolic information that participants cannot consciously see. In two experiments involving a Posner cueing task and a visual search task, a central cue informed participants about the likely location of the next target stimulus. In half of the trials, this cue was rendered invisible by pattern masking. In both experiments, visible cues led to cueing effects, that is, faster responses after valid compared to invalid cues. Importantly, even masked cues caused cueing effects, though to a lesser extent. Additionally, we analyzed effects on attention that persist from one trial to the subsequent trial. We found that spatial anticipations are able to interfere with newly formed spatial anticipations and influence orienting of attention in the subsequent trial. When the preceding cue was visible, the corresponding spatial anticipation persisted to an extent that prevented a noticeable effect of masked cues. The effects of visible cues were likewise modulated by previous spatial anticipations, but were strong enough to also exert an impact on attention themselves. Altogether, the results suggest that spatial anticipations can be formed on the basis of unconscious stimuli, but that interfering influences like still active spatial anticipations can suppress this effect. KW - masked priming KW - unconscious processing KW - anticipation KW - endogenous shifts of attention KW - spatial cueing Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123971 VL - 3 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - The translation of substance dependence criteria to food-related behaviors: different views and interpretations. JF - Frontiers in psychiatry N2 - No abstract available. Y1 - 2012 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123092 ER - TY - THES A1 - Campbell, Marlen Jamie-Lee T1 - Organizational cultures’ impact on employees’ corruption T1 - Der Einfluß von Organisationskultur auf die Korruption von Mitarbeitern N2 - Although many researchers refer to organizational culture as the key to explain employees' organizational corruption (= corruption on behalf of the organization), literature lacks systematic empirical evidence. Through a mixed-method approach this research tries to shed some first lights on this issue with the questions: what characteristics describe an organizational culture that promotes employees' corruption? Does a certain type of organizational culture shape a positive attitude towards organizational corruption? Does organizational culture differ in its impact on different types of corruption? Does organizational culture interact with employees’ sex to promote employees’ corruption? And, is there a main effect of sex on corruption? A qualitative study investigates the characteristics of a corrupt organizational culture in both general and in particular for managers and employees (Study 1). 14 experts of different occupations were asked about underlying assumptions, values, and norms of a corrupt organizational culture coding the frequency and relationship of their answers. The results showed specific underlying assumptions, values, and norms that were shared by the interviewees and provide first insights into their interrelatedness. In addition, the quantitative field survey (Study 2) analyzed if a corrupt organizational culture shapes a positive attitude towards organizational corruption and if both tangible rewards and lax control mechanism mediate this impact. 131 participants answered questionnaires about their perceived competition in their industry, tangible rewards, lax control mechanism, and their attitude towards both gifting and bribery. Results showed that lax control mechanism (and for gifting also tangible rewards) mediated the positive impact of a corrupt organizational culture on organizational corruption. In addition, men and women did not differ in their attitude towards organizational corruption in a corrupt organizational culture. Finally a web-based experiment investigates if organizational culture shapes employees' corruption (Study 3). In addition this approach also covers if the impact of organizational culture on corruption depends on the type of corruption (organizational corruption vs. counterproductive), and if employees’ sex influence corruption and if there is an interaction of organizational culture and sex on employees’ corruption. 563 participants had to decide whether they engage in corruption. Although a corrupt organizational culture raises both types of corruption, there was neither a notable main effect of sex nor a high impact interaction effect of both on both types of corruption. Thus, aspects of a corrupt organizational culture seem to influence employees' corruption. N2 - Obwohl Organisationskultur von vielen Wissenschaftlern als eine Schlüsseldeterminante gesehen wird um organisationale Korruption (= Korruption im Sinne der Organisation) zu erklären, fehlt es in der fachwissenschaftlichen Literatur an systematischen empiristischen Belegen: Welche Eigenschaften zeichnen eine korruptionsfördernde Organisationskultur aus? Kann ein bestimmter Typ von Organisationskultur eine positive Einstellung gegenüber organisationaler Korruption formen? Und schließlich: unterscheiden sich die Einflussfaktoren für Korruption zwischen verschiedenen Korruptionstypen? Durch die Anwendung verschiedenere methodischer Zugänge versucht diese wissenschaftliche Arbeit erste Antworten in diesem Forschungsfeld zu geben. Gibt es eine Interaktion zwischen dem Geschlecht der Mitarbeiter und der Organisationskultur und unterscheiden sich Männer und Frauen in ihrem korrupten Verhalten? Zunächst werden anhand einer qualitativen Analyse von 14 Experteninterviews grundlegende Charakteristiken einer Organisationskultur in korrupten Organisationen analysiert (Studie 1). Die Experten aus verschiedenen Berufsfeldern wurden zu ihrer Wahrnehmung der Organisationskultur von verschiedenen korrupten Organisationen befragt. Die Ergebnisse zeigten, dass es spezifische unbewusste Annahmen, Werte und Normen gibt, die von den verschiedenen Experten berichtet worden sind. Diese Studie ermöglicht erste Einblicke in die Wirkung der und Verbindungen zwischen den von den Experten wahrgenommenen Normen, Werten und Annahmen. Weiterführend analysierte eine Feldstudie (Studie 2), ob eine korrupte Organisationskultur eine positive Wirkung auf die Einstellung von Mitarbeitern zu organisationale Korruption hat. Weiter wurde untersucht, ob konkrete antizipierte Belohnungen und laxe Kontrollmechanismen bei der Aufgabenerfüllungen den Effekt der korrupten Organisationskultur auf organisationale Korruption mediieren. 131 Probanden beantworteten verschiedene Fragebögen zu ihrer Wahrnehmung von Wettbewerb in ihrer Branche, laxe Kontrollmechanismen von Korruption, zu konkreten Belohnungen in ihrer Organisation und zu ihrer Einstellung zu Geschenke und Bestechung. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass es einen Haupteffekt von der korrupten Organisationskultur auf organisationale Korruption vorhanden ist, dass dieser durch konkrete Belohnungen und laxe Kontrollmechanismen (bei Geschenken) und durch laxe Kontrollmechanismen (bei Bestechung) mediiert wird. Männer und Frauen unterscheiden sich in einer korrupten Organisationskultur nicht hinsichtlich ihrer Einstellung zur Korruption. Abschließend analysiert Studie 3 als web-basiertes Experiment, ob sich die Organisationskultur auf Korruption auswirkt. 563 Probanden spielten einen männlichen oder weiblichen Angestellten, welcher entweder in einer ethischen oder korrupten Organisationskultur in einer fiktiven Organisation arbeitet. Alle Teilnehmer mussten sich in der Rolle entscheiden, ob er oder sie in verschiedenen Arten von Korruption (organisationale vs. kontraproduktive Korruption) aktiv werden will. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass eine korrupte Organisationskultur einen ähnlich positiven Einfluss auf beide Typen von Korruption hatte. Das Geschlecht hatte weder einen nennenswert signifikanten oder keinen Einfluss auf die Annahme der Korruption. Darüber hinaus gab es keine Interaktion zwischen Geschlecht und Organisationskultur für beide Typen der Korruption. KW - Korruption KW - Organisationskultur KW - Organisationspsychologie KW - organisationale Korruption KW - Korruption von Mitarbeitern KW - korrupte Organisationskultur KW - organizational corruption KW - employees' corruption KW - corrupt organizational culture KW - corruption KW - Organisation Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-123251 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wölk, Julian A1 - Sütterlin, Stefan A1 - Koch, Stefan A1 - Vögele, Claus A1 - Schulz, Stefan M. T1 - Enhanced cardiac perception predicts impaired performance in the Iowa Gambling Task in patients with panic disorder JF - Brain and Behavior N2 - OBJECTIVE: Somatic marker theory predicts that somatic cues serve intuitive decision making; however, cardiovascular symptoms are threat cues for patients with panic disorder (PD). Therefore, enhanced cardiac perception may aid intuitive decision making only in healthy individuals, but impair intuitive decision making in PD patients. METHODS: PD patients and age-and sex-matched volunteers without a psychiatric diagnosis (n=17, respectively) completed the Iowa Gambling Task (IGT) as a measure of intuitive decision making. Interindividual differences in cardiac perception were assessed with a common mental-tracking task. RESULTS: In line with our hypothesis, we found a pattern of opposing associations (Fisher's Z=1.78, P=0.04) of high cardiac perception with improved IGT-performance in matched control-participants (r=0.36, n=14) but impaired IGT-performance in PD patients (r=-0.38, n=13). CONCLUSION: Interoceptive skills, typically assumed to aid intuitive decision making, can have the opposite effect in PD patients who experience interoceptive cues as threatening, and tend to avoid them. This may explain why PD patients frequently have problems with decision making in everyday life. Screening of cardiac perception may help identifying patients who benefit from specifically tailored interventions. KW - panic disorder KW - somatic marker hypothesis KW - cardiac perception KW - Iowa Gambling Task KW - decision making KW - interoception Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119865 SN - 2162-3279 VL - 4 IS - 2 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Lutz, Annika P. C. A1 - Krawietz, Vera A1 - Stützer, Judith A1 - Vögele, Claus A1 - Kübler, Andrea T1 - Food-cue affected motor response inhibition and self-reported dieting success: a pictorial affective shifting task JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - Behavioral inhibition is one of the basic facets of executive functioning and is closely related to self-regulation. Impulsive reactions, that is, low inhibitory control, have been associated with higher body mass index (BMI), binge eating, and other problem behaviors (e.g., substance abuse, pathological gambling, etc.). Nevertheless, studies which investigated the direct influence of food-cues on behavioral inhibition have been fairly inconsistent. In the current studies, we investigated food-cue affected behavioral inhibition in young women. For this purpose, we used a go/no-go task with pictorial food and neutral stimuli in which stimulus-response mapping is reversed after every other block (affective shifting task). In study 1, hungry participants showed faster reaction times to and omitted fewer food than neutral targets. Low dieting success and higher BMI were associated with behavioral disinhibition in food relative to neutral blocks. In study 2, both hungry and satiated individuals were investigated. Satiation did not influence overall task performance, but modulated associations of task performance with dieting success and self-reported impulsivity. When satiated, increased food craving during the task was associated with low dieting success, possibly indicating a preload-disinhibition effect following food intake. Food-cues elicited automatic action and approach tendencies regardless of dieting success, self-reported impulsivity, or current hunger levels. Yet, associations between dieting success, impulsivity, and behavioral food-cue responses were modulated by hunger and satiation. Future research investigating clinical samples and including other salient non-food stimuli as control category is warranted. KW - impulsivity KW - inhibitory control KW - response inhibition KW - go/no-go task KW - food-cues KW - dieting success KW - body mass index Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119840 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER - TY - THES A1 - Erlbeck, Helena T1 - The event-related potentials Mismatch Negativity, P300, and N400: Effects of attentional modulation and application in patients with disorders of consciousness T1 - Die ereigniskorrelierten Potentiale Mismatch Negativity, P300, und N400: Effekte von Aufmerksamkeitsmodulation und Anwendung in Patienten mit Störungen des Bewusstseins N2 - The present work comprises four studies dealing with the investigation of the auditory event-related potentials (ERP) Mismatch Negativity (MMN), P300, and N400 under different attentional instructions, and with their application in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC) to assess residual cognitive functioning. In guided interviews (study 1), practitioners working with DOC patients stated their general interest in and an objective need for the complementation of current diagnostic procedures by reliable and valid ERP-based methods. Subsequently, in study 2, simple oddball and semantic paradigms were applied to 19 behaviorally non-responsive DOC patients revealing the presence of at least one ERP in eight patients investigated. In the third and fourth study, specific attentional effects on ERPs were investigated in healthy participants to define optimal instructions and stimulus parameters. In study 3, MMN and N400 amplitudes were assessed in 18 participants, and in study 4, MMN and P300 amplitudes were assessed in 32 participants. Both studies included an ignore task (attention on simultaneous visual stimuli), a passive task, and a focused task and revealed distinct attentional effects on P300 and N400 with largest amplitudes in the focused task, smaller ones in the passive task and no ERP in the ignore task. An MMN was elicited in all tasks, but still, amplitudes differed as a function of task. In addition, study 4 included oddball paradigms comprising several deviants in different dimensions. Higher amplitudes were found in this multifeature paradigm compared to traditional oddball paradigms and larger amplitudes were elicited by deviants highly different from standards. It is concluded that ERPs represent a promising tool to complement clinical assessment of DOC patients. Application of ERP paradigms should include focused instructions, especially when using semantic material. Furthermore, multifeature paradigms have been proven especially useful eliciting large amplitudes and allowing for the investigation of several dimensions of deviants at the same time. N2 - Die vorliegende Arbeit beinhaltet vier Studien, die die auditorischen ereigniskorrelierten Potentiale (EKP) Mismatch Negativität (MMN), P300, und N400 unter verschiedenen Instruktionen untersuchen, und deren Anwendung bei Patienten mit Bewusstseinsstörungen darstellen. In Studie 1 äußerten neurologische Fachärzte in Leitfadeninterviews ein generelles Interesse und eine objektive Notwendigkeit der Ergänzung bisheriger diagnostischer Vorgehensweisen durch EKP-basierte Methoden. In Studie 2 wurden 19 motorisch nicht-responsiven Patienten verschiedene Stimuli in Form einfacher Oddball-Paradigmen und semantischen Materials dargeboten und es konnte in acht Patienten mindestens ein EKP nachgewiesen wer-den. Studie 3 und 4 dienten der Untersuchung spezifischer Aufmerksamkeitseffekte auf EKPs in Gesunden, um optimale Instruktionen und Stimulusparameter zu definieren. Es wurden jeweils MMN und N400 in 18 Teilnehmern und MMN und P300 in 32 Teilnehmern untersucht. Beide Studien enthielten eine Ablenkungsaufgabe (simultane visuelle Reize), eine passive und eine fokussierte Aufgabe und zeigten deutliche Aufgabeneffekte auf P300 und N400. Die höchsten Amplituden wurden in der fokussierten Aufgabe ausgelöst, kleinere in der passiven und kein EKP in der Ablenkungsaufgabe. Eine MMN wurde in allen Aufgaben ausgelöst, aber auch hier unterschieden sich die Amplituden in Abhängigkeit der Aufgabe. Studie 4 ent-hielt außerdem ein Oddball mit mehreren abweichenden Tönen in vier Dimensionen. Dieses erzielte höhere Amplituden als das klassische Oddball mit nur einem abweichenden Ton. Hö-here Amplituden wurden von abweichenden Tönen ausgelöst, welche sich stark vom Standardton unterschieden. EKPs stellen ein vielversprechendes Instrument zur Ergänzung klini-scher Diagnosen bewusstseinsgestörter Patienten dar. Es sollte auf eindeutig zu differenzierende abweichende Reize und bei semantischen Material auf fokussierte Instruktionen zurückgegriffen werden. Paradigmen mit verschiedenen abweichenden Tönen können aufgrund höherer Amplituden und eines umfassenden Reizverarbeitungsprofils besonders nützlich sein. KW - event-related potentials KW - attention KW - ereigniskorrelierte Potentiale KW - Aufmerksamkeit KW - disorders of consciousness KW - Bewusstseinsstörungen KW - Bewusstseinsstörung KW - Ereigniskorreliertes Potenzial KW - Bewusstsein Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-121041 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Höhne, Johannes A1 - Holz, Elisa A1 - Staiger-Sälzer, Pit A1 - Müller, Klaus-Robert A1 - Kübler, Andrea A1 - Tangermann, Michael T1 - Motor Imagery for Severely Motor-Impaired Patients: Evidence for Brain-Computer Interfacing as Superior Control Solution JF - PLoS ONE N2 - Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) strive to decode brain signals into control commands for severely handicapped people with no means of muscular control. These potential users of noninvasive BCIs display a large range of physical and mental conditions. Prior studies have shown the general applicability of BCI with patients, with the conflict of either using many training sessions or studying only moderately restricted patients. We present a BCI system designed to establish external control for severely motor-impaired patients within a very short time. Within only six experimental sessions, three out of four patients were able to gain significant control over the BCI, which was based on motor imagery or attempted execution. For the most affected patient, we found evidence that the BCI could outperform the best assistive technology (AT) of the patient in terms of control accuracy, reaction time and information transfer rate. We credit this success to the applied user-centered design approach and to a highly flexible technical setup. State-of-the art machine learning methods allowed the exploitation and combination of multiple relevant features contained in the EEG, which rapidly enabled the patients to gain substantial BCI control. Thus, we could show the feasibility of a flexible and tailorable BCI application in severely disabled users. This can be considered a significant success for two reasons: Firstly, the results were obtained within a short period of time, matching the tight clinical requirements. Secondly, the participating patients showed, compared to most other studies, very severe communication deficits. They were dependent on everyday use of AT and two patients were in a locked-in state. For the most affected patient a reliable communication was rarely possible with existing AT. KW - eyes KW - signal filtering KW - social communication KW - hands KW - machine learning KW - man-computer interface KW - games KW - electroencephalography Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119331 VL - 9 IS - 8 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Meule, Adrian A1 - Gearhard, Ashley N. T1 - Food Addiction in the Light of DSM-5 JF - Nutrients N2 - The idea that specific kind of foods may have an addiction potential and that some forms of overeating may represent an addicted behavior has been discussed for decades. In recent years, the interest in food addiction is growing and research on this topic lead to more precise definitions and assessment methods. For example, the Yale Food Addiction Scale has been developed for the measurement of addiction-like eating behavior based on the diagnostic criteria for substance dependence of the fourth revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV). In 2013, diagnostic criteria for substance abuse and-dependence were merged, thereby increasing the number of symptoms for substance use disorders (SUDs) in the DSM-5. Moreover, gambling disorder is now included along SUDs as a behavioral addiction. Although a plethora of review articles exist that discuss the applicability of the DSM-IV substance dependence criteria to eating behavior, the transferability of the newly added criteria to eating is unknown. Thus, the current article discusses if and how these new criteria may be translated to overeating. Furthermore, it is examined if the new SUD criteria will impact future research on food addiction, for example, if "diagnosing" food addiction should also be adapted by considering all of the new symptoms. Given the critical response to the revisions in DSM-5, we also discuss if the recent approach of Research Domain Criteria can be helpful in evaluating the concept of food addiction. KW - food addiction KW - obesity KW - binge eating KW - RDoC KW - DSM-IV KW - DSM-5 KW - substance dependence KW - substance use disorder KW - gambling KW - craving Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-119279 SN - 2072-6643 VL - 6 IS - 9 ER - TY - THES A1 - Zürn, Michael T1 - The Dual Nature of Utility - Categorical and Comparative Evaluations in Economic Decisions T1 - Die Dualität des Nutzens - kategoriale und komparative Bewertungen in ökonomischen Entscheidungen N2 - Utility is perhaps the most central concept in modern economic theorizing. However, the behaviorist reduction to Revealed Preference not only removed the psychological content of utility but experimental investigations also exposed numerous anomalies in this theory. This program of research focused on the psychological processes by which utility judgments are generated. For this purpose, the standard assumption of a homogeneous concept is substituted by the Utilitarian Duality Hypothesis. In particular, judgments concerning categorical utility (uCat) infer an object's category based on its attributes which may subsequently allow the transfer of evaluative information like feelings or attitudes. In contrast, comparative utility (uCom) depends on the distance to a reference value on a specific dimension of comparison. Importantly, dimensions of comparison are manifold and context dependent. In a series of experiments, we show that the resulting Dual Utility Model is able to explain several known anomalies in a parsimonious fashion. Moreover, we identify central factors determining the relative weight assigned to both utility components. Finally, we discuss the implications of the Utilitarian Duality for both, the experimental practice in economics as well as the consequences for economic theorizing. In sum, we propose that the Dual Utility Model can serve as an integrative framework for both the rational model and its anomalies. N2 - Der Nutzen ist wohl eines der meist beachteten Konzepte der ökonomischen Theorie. Allerdings entfernte die behavioristische Reduktion auf offenbarte Präferenzen nicht nur den psychologischen Inhalt des Nutzens, sondern zeigte darüber hinaus in experimentellen Untersuchungen auch zahlreiche Anomalien der Theorie auf. Das vorliegende Forschungsprogramm stellt die psychologischen Prozesse in den Vordergrund, mittels derer Nutzen beurteilt wird. Zu diesem Zweck wird die verbreitete Annahme eines homogenen Konzepts durch die Zwei-Nutzen-Hypothese ersetzt. Im Besonderen bestimmen Urteile über den kategorialen Nutzen (uCat) anhand der Attribute eines Objekts zunächst dessen Kategorie, wodurch daraufhin bewertende Informationen, wie z.B. Gefühle oder Einstellungen, auf das Objekt übertragen werden können. Demgegenüber bestimmt sich der komparative Nutzen (uCom) über die Abweichung von einem Referenzwert in einer bestimmten Vergleichsdimension, welche generell zahlreich und kontextabhängig sein können. In einer Serie von Experimenten wird gezeigt, dass das resultierende Zwei-Nutzen-Modell eine Reihe von bekannten Anomalien in einer sparsamen Weise erklären kann. Darüber hinaus werden zentrale Faktoren identifiziert, welche die relative Gewichtung beider Nutzenkomponenten bestimmen. Schließlich werden die Implikationen der Zwei-Nutzen-Hypothese für die experimentelle Praxis und die ökonomische Theorie diskutiert. Zusammenfassend wird ausgeführt, dass das entwickelte Zwei-Nutzen-Modell als integrativer Rahmen für sowohl das rationale Modell als auch für seine Anomalien dienen kann. KW - Nutzen KW - Psychologie KW - Ultimatum Game KW - transaction utility KW - preference construction KW - utility KW - revealed preference KW - Wert KW - Preisvergleich KW - Nutzenvergleich Y1 - 2015 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-120141 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wieser, Matthias J. A1 - Gerdes, Antje B. M. A1 - Reicherts, Philipp A1 - Pauli, Paul T1 - Mutual influences of pain and emotional face processing JF - Frontiers in Psychology N2 - The perception of unpleasant stimuli enhances whereas the perception of pleasant stimuli decreases pain perception. In contrast, the effects of pain on the processing of emotional stimuli are much less known. Especially given the recent interest in facial expressions of pain as a special category of emotional stimuli, a main topic in this research line is the mutual influence of pain and facial expression processing. Therefore, in this mini-review we selectively summarize research on the effects of emotional stimuli on pain, but more extensively turn to the opposite direction namely how pain influences concurrent processing of affective stimuli such as facial expressions. Based on the motivational priming theory one may hypothesize that the perception of pain enhances the processing of unpleasant stimuli and decreases the processing of pleasant stimuli. This review reveals that the literature is only partly consistent with this assumption: pain reduces the processing of pleasant pictures and happy facial expressions, but does not – or only partly – affect processing of unpleasant pictures. However, it was demonstrated that pain selectively enhances the processing of facial expressions if these are pain-related (i.e., facial expressions of pain). Extending a mere affective modulation theory, the latter results suggest pain-specific effects which may be explained by the perception-action model of empathy. Together, these results underscore the important mutual influence of pain and emotional face processing. KW - emotion KW - facial expression KW - ERPs KW - perception-action KW - pain Y1 - 2014 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-118446 SN - 1664-1078 VL - 5 ER -