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Jiajin Yuan

Researcher at Sichuan Normal University

Publications -  102
Citations -  2333

Jiajin Yuan is an academic researcher from Sichuan Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 84 publications receiving 1913 citations. Previous affiliations of Jiajin Yuan include University of Electronic Science and Technology of China & Chinese Ministry of Education.

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Individual Differences in Spontaneous Expressive Suppression Predict Amygdala Responses to Fearful Stimuli: The Role of Suppression Priming.

TL;DR: It is suggested that in collectivistic cultural settings, individual differences in expressive suppression do not alter fear-related neural activation during suppression-irrelevant context, as reflected by the priming-specific decrease of emotional subcortical activations with more use of expressive suppression.
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Are we sensitive to valence differences in emotionally negative stimuli? Electrophysiological evidence from an ERP study.

TL;DR: It is suggested that humans are only sensitive to valence differences in negative stimuli, and that these negative valences could be processed differentially throughout the information processing stream even when individuals are highly engaged in a non-emotional task.
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Gender differences in behavioral inhibitory control: ERP evidence from a two-choice oddball task

TL;DR: The results showed faster reaction times for deviant stimuli in women than in men, although RTs for standard stimuli were similar across genders, and gender-related behavioral inhibitory control may relate to differential inhibitory demands by each gender during evolution.
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The neural mechanism underlying the female advantage in identifying negative emotions: an event-related potential study.

TL;DR: Aside from the increased sensitivity of both genders to the highly negative stimuli, the present study demonstrated that women, instead of men, are sensitive to emotionally negative stimuli of lesser saliency, which may be an important mechanism underlying the female advantage in identifying negative emotions.
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Neural correlates of the females' susceptibility to negative emotions: an insight into gender-related prevalence of affective disturbances.

TL;DR: Although both genders are sensitive to HN stimuli, females, instead of males, are particularly susceptible to negative stimuli of lesser salience, and this female specific susceptibility does not exist to the positive stimuli.