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202An other-race effect for configural and featural processing of faces: upper and lower face regions play different rolesFrontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
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47Development of moral reasoning in situational and cultural contextsJournal of Moral Education 49 (2): 177-193. 2020.This article examines relationships between children and youths’ judgments and their justifications of truth telling and verbal deception, in situational and cultural contexts. Han Chinese, Euro-Canadians and Chinese-Canadians, seven- to 17-years of age were presented competitive scenarios in which protagonists told either lies to protect, or truths to harm, various levels of collectivity. Participants evaluated protagonists’ statements, using a 7-point scale, and justified their judgments. Cult…Read more
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22Parenting by lyingJournal of Moral Education 38 (3): 353-369. 2009.The present set of studies identifies the phenomenon of ‘parenting by lying’, in which parents lie to their children as a means of influencing their emotional states and behaviour. In Study 1, undergraduates (n = 127) reported that their parents had lied to them while maintaining a concurrent emphasis on the importance of honesty. In Study 2 (n = 127), parents reported lying to their children and considered doing so to be acceptable under some circumstances, even though they also reported teachi…Read more
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23Development of children’s moral evaluations of modesty and self-promotion in diverse cultural settingsJournal of Moral Education 41 (1): 61-78. 2012.This cross-cultural study of the moral judgements of Mainland Han-Chinese, Chinese-Canadian, and Euro-Canadian children aged seven to 11 examined the evaluations of narrative protagonists’ modest lies and self-promoting truthful statements in situations where they had done a good deed. The story characters had thus either lied or told the truth about a prosocial act that they had committed. Chinese children judged modest lies more positively and boastful truths less positively than Euro-Canadian…Read more
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147Discrete emotions discovered by contactless measurement of facial blood flowsCognition and Emotion 36 (7): 1429-1439. 2022.Experiential and behavioural aspects of emotions can be measured readily but developing a contactless measure of emotions’ physiological aspects has been a major challenge. We hypothesised that different emotion-evoking films can produce distinctive facial blood flow patterns that can serve as physiological signatures of discrete emotions. To test this hypothesis, we created a new Transdermal Optical Imaging system that uses a conventional video camera to capture facial blood flows in a contactl…Read more
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163On the facilitative effects of face motion on face recognition and its developmentFrontiers in Psychology 5. 2014.
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134Own-Group Face Recognition Bias: The Effects of Location and ReputationFrontiers in Psychology 8. 2017.
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95The Fusiform Face Area Plays a Greater Role in Holistic Processing for Own-Race Faces Than Other-Race FacesFrontiers in Human Neuroscience 12. 2018.
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47Default settings affect children's decisions about whether to be honestCognition 235 (C): 105390. 2023.
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80Young Children Selectively Hide the Truth About Sensitive TopicsCognitive Science 44 (3). 2020.Starting in early childhood, children are socialized to be honest. However, they are also expected to avoid telling the truth in sensitive situations if doing so could be seen as inappropriate or impolite. Across two studies (total N = 358), the reasoning of 3‐ to 5‐year‐old children in such a scenario was investigated by manipulating whether the information in question would be helpful to the recipient. The studies used a reverse rouge paradigm, in which a confederate with a highly salient red …Read more
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79Corrigendum: Exposure to Parenting by Lying in Childhood: Associations with Negative Outcomes in AdulthoodFrontiers in Psychology 8. 2017.
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196Looking Across Domains to Understand Infant Representation of EmotionEmotion Review 3 (2): 197-206. 2011.A comparison of the literatures on how infants represent generic object classes, gender and race information in faces, and emotional expressions reveals both common and distinctive developments in the three domains. In addition, the review indicates that some very basic questions remain to be answered regarding how infants represent facial displays of emotion, including (a) whether infants form category representations for discrete classes of emotion, (b) when and how such representations come t…Read more
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117Angry facial expressions bias gender categorization in children and adults: behavioral and computational evidenceFrontiers in Psychology 6. 2015.
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110Development of face processing expertiseIn Andy Calder, Gillian Rhodes, Mark Johnson & Jim Haxby (eds.), Oxford Handbook of Face Perception, Oxford University Press. 2011.This article focuses on the corresponding research findings pertaining to developmental changes throughout infancy to adolescence in processing various bits of face trait information. It examines whether faces are indeed a special class of stimuli. The role of experience in developing species-specific face expertise and standards of attractiveness are discussed. The research on infants' and children's categorization of different face types aids in exploring how the development of face categoriza…Read more
Seoul, Korea (Republic of)
Areas of Specialization
| Other Academic Areas |
| Philosophy, Misc |
Areas of Interest
| Other Academic Areas |
| Philosophy, Misc |