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Arthur M. Jacobs

Researcher at Free University of Berlin

Publications -  263
Citations -  16058

Arthur M. Jacobs is an academic researcher from Free University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Word recognition & Lexical decision task. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 260 publications receiving 14636 citations. Previous affiliations of Arthur M. Jacobs include Ruhr University Bochum & School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences.

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The Temporal Pole Top-Down Modulates the Ventral Visual Stream During Social Cognition

TL;DR: The findings indicate that during social cognition, TP integrates information from different modalities and top‐down modulates lower‐level perceptual areas in the ventral visual stream as a function of integration demands.
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Approach the Good, Withdraw from the Bad—A Review on Frontal Alpha Asymmetry Measures in Applied Psychological Research

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of the application of frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) training in the treatment of affective disorders such as major depressive disorder and anxiety disorder is presented.
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Emotional Picture and Word Processing: An fMRI Study on Effects of Stimulus Complexity

TL;DR: It is suggested that both pictures and words elicit emotional responses with no general superiority for either stimulus modality, while emotional responses to pictures are modulated by perceptual stimulus features, such as picture complexity.
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Discrete Emotion Effects on Lexical Decision Response Times

TL;DR: Using backward elimination and multiple regression analyses, it is shown that five discrete emotions explain as much variance as two published dimensional models assuming continuous or categorical valence, with the variables happiness, disgust and fear significantly contributing to this account.
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Automatic letter priming in an alphabetic decision task.

TL;DR: An alphabetic decision task was used to study effects of form priming on letter recognition at very short prime durations, and it was demonstrated that uppercase letters are classified more rapidly as letters when they are preceded by a briefly exposed, forward- and backward-masked, visually similar uppercases.