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  1. Reactions to discrimination, stigmatization, ostracism, and other forms of interpersonal rejection: A multimotive model.Laura Smart Richman & Mark R. Leary - 2009 - Psychological Review 116 (2):365-383.
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  • Does Social Exclusion Improve Detection of Real and Fake Smiles? A Replication Study.Simon Schindler & Martin Trede - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Research on social exclusion suggests an increased attention of excluded persons to subtle social cues. In one study (N= 32), published inPsychological Science,Bernstein et al. (2008)provided evidence for this idea by showing that participants in the social exclusion condition were better in correctly categorizing a target person’s smile as real or fake. Although highly cited, this finding has never been directly replicated. The present study aimed to fill that gap. 201 participants (79.1% female) were randomly assigned to a social exclusion, (...)
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  • Compensating for age limits through emotional crossmodal integration.Laurence Chaby, Viviane Luherne-du Boullay, Mohamed Chetouani & Monique Plaza - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6:146388.
    Social interactions in daily life necessitate the integration of social signals from different sensory modalities. In the aging literature, it is well established that the recognition of emotion in facial expressions declines with advancing age, and this also occurs with vocal expressions. By contrast, crossmodal integration processing in healthy aging individuals is less documented. Here, we investigated the age-related effects on emotion recognition when faces and voices were presented alone or simultaneously, allowing for crossmodal integration. In this study, 31 young (...)
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