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Joel S. Winston

Researcher at Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging

Publications -  43
Citations -  6176

Joel S. Winston is an academic researcher from Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Social cognition. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 39 publications receiving 5828 citations. Previous affiliations of Joel S. Winston include Middlesex University & Northwestern University.

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Automatic and intentional brain responses during evaluation of trustworthiness of faces.

TL;DR: The findings extend a proposed model of social cognition by highlighting a functional dissociation between automatic engagement of amygdala versus intentional engagement of STS in social judgment.
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Beauty in a smile: The role of medial orbitofrontal cortex in facial attractiveness

TL;DR: Brain regions that respond to attractive faces which manifested either a neutral or mildly happy face expression were investigated, suggesting that the reward value of an attractive face as indexed by medial OFC activity is modulated by a perceiver directed smile.
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fMRI-adaptation reveals dissociable neural representations of identity and expression in face perception.

TL;DR: Results provide neuroanatomical evidence for the distributed model of face processing and highlight a dissociation within right STS between a caudal segment coding identity and a more rostral region coding emotional expression.
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Brain responses to the acquired moral status of faces.

TL;DR: The data indicate that rapid learning regarding the moral status of others is expressed in altered neural activity within a system associated with social cognition, and this indicates the saliency of social fairness for human interactions.
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Common and distinct neural responses during direct and incidental processing of multiple facial emotions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed an event-related fMRI experiment in which subjects viewed morphed emotional faces displaying low or high intensities of disgust, fear, happiness, or sadness under two task conditions.