•  19
    Do you hear what I see? An audio-visual paradigm to assess emotional egocentricity bias
    with Mariana von Mohr, Gianluca Finotti, and Manos Tsakiris
    Cognition and Emotion 34 (4): 756-770. 2020.
    ABSTRACTWe often use our own emotions to understand other people’s emotions. However, emotional egocentric biases, namely the tendency to use one’s own emotional state when relating to others...
  •  17
    Eating and body image: Does food insecurity make us feel thinner?
    with Elena Azañón and Matthew R. Longo
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40. 2017.
  •  16
    Conceptual distortions of hand structure are robust to changes in stimulus information
    with Luigi Tamè and Matthew R. Longo
    Consciousness and Cognition 61 107-116. 2016.
    Hands are commonly held up as an exemplar of well-known, familiar objects. However, conceptual knowledge of the hand has been found to show highly stereotyped distortions. Specifically, people judge their knuckles as farther forward in the hand than they actually are. The cause of this distal bias remains unclear. In Experiment 1, we tested whether both visual and tactile information contribute to the distortion. Participants judged the location of their knuckles by pointing to the location on t…Read more
  • Non-Attended Representations are Perceptual Rather than Unconscious in Nature
    with Annelinde R. E. Vandenbroucke, Ilja G. Sligte, Johannes J. Fahrenfort, and Victor A. F. Lamme
    PLoS ONE 7 (11). 2012.
    Introspectively we experience a phenomenally rich world. In stark contrast, many studies show that we can only report on the few items that we happen to attend to. So what happens to the unattended objects? Are these consciously processed as our first person perspective would have us believe, or are they – in fact – entirely unconscious? Here, we attempt to resolve this question by investigating the perceptual characteristics of visual sensory memory. Sensory memory is a fleeting, high-capacity …Read more