Results show:
-Faces were evaluated most positively when actions led to rewards.
-Faces were evaluated most negatively when inactions led to avoiding punishments.
-Faces were evaluated more negatively when inactions (vs. actions) led to avoiding punishments, showing the unique impact of inactions.
16.04.2025 09:47 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
After learning, people were asked to evaluate the faces. (4/5)
16.04.2025 09:47 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Results on learning show that:
-People found it easier to act to get rewards than to avoid punishments.
-People found it easier to not act to avoid punishments than to get rewards.
-There was no difference in learning to act or not act to avoid punishments. (3/5)
16.04.2025 09:47 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
In our experiments, people learned to act (action) or not act (inaction) in response to images of faces to get rewards or avoid punishments. (2/5)
16.04.2025 09:47 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Results show:
-Faces were evaluated most positively when actions led to rewards.
-Faces were evaluated most negatively when inactions led to avoiding punishments.
-Faces were evaluated more negatively when inactions (vs. actions) led to avoiding punishments, showing the unique impact of inactions.
16.04.2025 09:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
After learning, people were asked to evaluate the faces. (4/5)
16.04.2025 09:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Results on learning show that:
-People found it easier to act to get rewards than to avoid punishments.
-People found it easier to not act to avoid punishments than to get rewards.
-There was no difference in learning to act or not act to avoid punishments. (3/5)
16.04.2025 09:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
In our experiments, people learned to act (action) or not act (inaction) in response to images of faces to get rewards or avoid punishments. (2/5)
16.04.2025 09:40 β π 0 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Relationship science, open and reproducible science. Western University, Psychology (social, personality, methods/stats).
Faculty @ Ben-Gurion University. Interested in stereotypes, memory, biases, and their intersection w/ cognitive neuroscience. He/him
https://scmbbgu.wixsite.com/scmblab
Postdoctoral researcher in computational psychiatry @UniTuebingen | Also likes Stats and Open Science
Postdoctoral Researcher π§
Experimental Psychopathology and Affective Neuroscience (Donders Institute and Behavioral Science Institute, Radboud University)
https://www.epanlab.nl/
Social psychologist & professor at Rutgers University.
Studying how to reduce prejudice and discrimination.
Opinions are my own. he/him
calvinklai.com
PhD Candidate at Uni of Oxford, visiting ARC at MPI Berlin. Researching (violation of) social norms. Lover of open science and cats.
Psychology postdoc at McGill University | Socio-cognitive approaches to social categorization, stereotyping, and prejudice | She/her π³οΈβπ
suraiyaallidina.com
Social Psychology Prof at University of Amsterdam. Prejudice & social cognition using experimental, computational, neuro, & AI approaches.
PhD Student, Radboud University (Netherlands). Researching how our social and cultural environments shape our implicit biases. Big Team Science & Statistics enthusiast.
Associate Professor at Radboud University. I post about mental effort and mental fatigue. https://www.bveld.info
Social Psychologist | Radboud University | Behavioural Science Institute | RaFD | Radboud Social Cognition Lab
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