PMID: 6536328Jul 1, 1984Paper

Face memory and hemispheric preference: emotionality and extraversion

Brain and Cognition
W B Thompson, J H Mueller

Abstract

Subjects made arousing or nonarousing judgments about photographs of strangers, then had an unannounced recognition test over the photographs. Emotional orienting tasks led to better retention than nonemotional tasks. Assuming emotionality is predominantly a right-hemisphere activity, then this result is consistent with other research showing a right-hemisphere advantage in processing faces. This difference was most clear for subjects with a right-hemisphere cognitive style. Extraversion had no effect on face recognition, nor did a subject's cognitive style seem to be associated with extraversion or neuroticism scores.

References

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Citations

Jun 15, 2010·Social Neuroscience·Celeste H M CheungJames C McPartland
Mar 27, 2001·The International Journal of Neuroscience·P RussoM Trimarchi
Oct 8, 1999·The International Journal of Neuroscience·P RussoM Trimarchi
Jan 14, 2012·Psychological Reports·Michael P Kelley
Mar 27, 2015·The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology : QJEP·Karen Lander, Siddhi Poyarekar
Jul 10, 2018·Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications·Karen LanderMarkus Bindemann
Dec 11, 2020·PloS One·Ahmed M Megreya, Robert D Latzman

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