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Ana P. Pinheiro

Researcher at University of Lisbon

Publications -  115
Citations -  1776

Ana P. Pinheiro is an academic researcher from University of Lisbon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Valence (psychology) & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 101 publications receiving 1341 citations. Previous affiliations of Ana P. Pinheiro include University of Minho & VA Boston Healthcare System.

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The adaptation of the Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW) for European Portuguese

TL;DR: The EP adaptation of the Affective Norms for English Words for European Portuguese is shown to be a valid and useful tool that will allow researchers to control and/or manipulate the affective properties of stimuli, as well as to develop cross-linguistic studies.
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Genetic and morphological variation of Solea lascaris (Risso, 1810) along the Portuguese coast

TL;DR: Both genetic and morphological analyses indicated a great variability but suggested low levels of differentiation along the Portuguese coast, but genetic analysis showed that these levels were significant and population structure should be analysed using markers able to detect a greater degree of population differentiation.
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Sensory-based and higher-order operations contribute to abnormal emotional prosody processing in schizophrenia: an electrophysiological investigation.

TL;DR: Correlations between ERP and behavioral data point to a relationship between early sensory abnormalities and prosody recognition in schizophrenia, and indicate that abnormalities in prosody processing occur at the three stages of EP processing, and are enhanced in SSC.
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Electrophysiological insights into processing nonverbal emotional vocalizations.

TL;DR: Electrophysiological measures indicate a rapid and automatic differentiation of emotional as compared with neutral vocalizations and suggest that this differentiation is not dependent on valence.
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Emotional cues during simultaneous face and voice processing: electrophysiological insights.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the general effect of emotion on audiovisual processing can emerge as early as 200 msec (P200 peak latency) post stimulus onset, in spite of implicit affective processing task demands, and that such effect is mainly distributed in the frontal-central region.