scispace - formally typeset
C

Carlos Cardenas-Iniguez

Researcher at University of Chicago

Publications -  38
Citations -  511

Carlos Cardenas-Iniguez is an academic researcher from University of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Psychopathology. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 23 publications receiving 321 citations. Previous affiliations of Carlos Cardenas-Iniguez include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & McGovern Institute for Brain Research.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Loneliness and implicit attention to social threat: A high-performance electrical neuroimaging study

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that social threat images are differentiated from nonsocial threat stimuli more quickly in the lonely than nonlonely brains, suggesting that speed of threat processing in lonely individuals is in accord with the evolutionary model of loneliness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Criterion validity and relationships between alternative hierarchical dimensional models of general and specific psychopathology.

TL;DR: Evaluating parent symptom ratings of 9-10 year olds in the ABCD Study indicated that all factors in both bifactor and second-order models exhibited at least adequate construct reliability and estimated replicability, and the interpretation of such associations in second-orders was ambiguous due to shared variance among factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The impact of motivation on race-based impression formation.

TL;DR: Individual differences in internal motivation to respond without prejudice (IMS) were found to shape the extent to which dmPFC activity indexes the interactive effects of race and affective associations during impression formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social status level and dimension interactively influence person evaluations indexed by P300s.

TL;DR: Analysis of the P300 amplitude revealed an interaction of status level and status dimension such that enhanced P300 amplitudes were observed in response to targets of high financial and low moral status relative to target of low financial and high moral status.