Åse Innes-Ker

ORCID: 0000-0002-3208-9658
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Memory Processes and Influences
  • Deception detection and forensic psychology
  • Child and Animal Learning Development
  • Educational Strategies and Epistemologies
  • Face Recognition and Perception
  • Radiology practices and education
  • Emotions and Moral Behavior
  • Attachment and Relationship Dynamics
  • Evolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
  • Color perception and design
  • Multisensory perception and integration
  • Creativity in Education and Neuroscience
  • Psychological and Educational Research Studies
  • Neuroscience and Music Perception
  • Video Analysis and Summarization
  • Motivation and Self-Concept in Sports
  • Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
  • Taxation and Compliance Studies
  • Emotion and Mood Recognition
  • Sexual Assault and Victimization Studies
  • Psychology of Development and Education
  • Data Analysis and Archiving
  • Body Image and Dysmorphia Studies
  • Multimodal Machine Learning Applications
  • Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies

Lund University
2010-2021

Linköping University
2020

University of Gothenburg
2014

Indiana University
2002

Indiana University Bloomington
2001

Richard Klein Michelangelo Vianello Fred Hasselman Byron G. Adams Reginald B. Adams and 95 more Sinan Alper Mark Aveyard Jordan Axt Mayowa T. Babalola Štěpán Bahník Rishtee Batra Mihály Berkics Michael J. Bernstein Daniel R. Berry Olga Białobrzeska Evans Dami Binan Konrad Bocian Mark J. Brandt Robert Busching Anna Cabak Rédei Huajian Cai Fanny Cambier Katarzyna Cantarero Cheryl L. Carmichael Francisco Céric Jesse Chandler Jen‐Ho Chang Armand Chatard Eva E. Chen Winnee Cheong David C. Cicero Sharon Coen Jennifer A. Coleman Brian Collisson Morgan Conway Katherine S. Corker Paul Curran Fiery Cushman Zubairu Kwambo Dagona Ilker Dalgar Anna Dalla Rosa William E. Davis Maaike de Bruijn Leander De Schutter Thierry Devos Marieke de Vries Canay Doğulu Nerisa Dozo Kristin Nicole Dukes Yarrow Dunham Kevin Durrheim Charles R. Ebersole John E. Edlund Anja Eller Alexander Scott English Carolyn Finck Natalia Frankowska Miguel-Ángel Freyre Michael Friedman Elisa Maria Galliani Joshua C. Gandi Tanuka Ghoshal Steffen R. Giessner Tripat Gill Timo Gnambs Ángel Gómez Roberto González Jesse Graham Jon Grahe Ivan Grahek Eva G. T. Green Kakul Hai Matthew Haigh Elizabeth L. Haines Michael P. Hall Marie E. Heffernan Joshua A. Hicks Petr Houdek Jeffrey R. Huntsinger Ho Phi Huynh Hans IJzerman Yoel Inbar Åse Innes-Ker William Jiménez‐Leal Melissa-Sue John Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba Roza Gizem Kamiloglu Heather Barry Kappes Serdar Karabatı Haruna Karick Victor N. Keller Anna Kende Nicolas Kervyn Goran Knežević Carrie Kovacs Lacy E. Krueger German Kurapov Jamie Kurtz Daniël Lakens Ljiljana B. Lazarević

We conducted preregistered replications of 28 classic and contemporary published findings, with protocols that were peer reviewed in advance, to examine variation effect magnitudes across samples settings. Each protocol was administered approximately half 125 comprised 15,305 participants from 36 countries territories. Using the conventional criterion statistical significance ( p < .05), we found 15 (54%) provided evidence a statistically significant same direction as original finding....

10.1177/2515245918810225 article EN Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science 2018-12-01

Abstract Participants in manipulated emotional states played computerised movies which facial expressions of emotion changed into categorically different expressions. The participants' task was to detect the offset initial expression. An effect state observed such that individuals happy saw happiness (changing sadness) at an earlier point than did those sad states. Similarly, condition participants detected a expression changing participants. This result is consistent with proposed role...

10.1080/02699930143000194 article EN Cognition & Emotion 2001-11-01

This meta-analysis investigated the relations between creative self-efficacy (CSE) and creativity measures hypothesized that self-assessed questionnaires would have a different relation to beliefs compared other tests. The synthesized 60 effect sizes from 41 papers (overall N = 17226). Taken as whole, CSE was of medium size (r .39). Subgroup analyses revealed self-rated correlated higher with .53). divergent thinking (DT) tests weak .23). Creativity scales had .43), stronger than verbal...

10.1080/10400419.2018.1411436 article EN Creativity Research Journal 2018-01-02

Adult attachment orientation has been associated with specific patterns of emotion regulation. The present research examined the effects on perceptual processing emotional stimuli. Experimental participants played computerized movies faces that expressed happiness, sadness, and anger. Over course movies, facial expressions became neutral. Participants reported frame at which initial expression no longer appeared face. Under conditions distress (Study 1), fearfully attached individuals saw...

10.1037/0022-3514.82.3.419 article EN Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 2002-03-01

According to film mythology, the Soviet filmmaker Lev Kuleshov conducted an experiment in which he combined a close-up of actor's neutral face with three different emotional contexts: happiness, sadness, and hunger. The viewers sequences reportedly perceived as expressing emotion congruent given context. It is not clear, however, whether or so-called "Kuleshov effect" really exists. original footage lost recent attempts at replication have produced either conflicting unreliable results....

10.1177/0301006616638595 article EN Perception 2016-04-06

An objection to conclusions of research investigating effects emotions on cognitive processes is that the are due activation semantic concepts rather than emotional feelings. A sentence unscrambling task was developed prime happiness, sadness, or neutral ideas. Pilot studies demonstrated sentences did not affect state but semantically related words. Experiment 1 showed induction produced emotion-congruent judgments. Results 2 individuals in states categorized according equivalence more often...

10.1037/0022-3514.83.4.804 article EN Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 2002-10-01

This study investigated eyewitnesses' memory and confidence accuracy for action information (what happened at the crime scene), detail (descriptions of persons, objects, time place). In Experiment 1, 89 participants watched a film participated in one four conditions: Laboratory discussion, Family Retell Control, first three with five meetings each. Three weeks later all open free recalled events, judged their answers. The showed better recall than information. Participants two discussion...

10.5093/ejpalc2014a3 article EN cc-by-nc-nd The European Journal of Psychology Applied to Legal Context 2014-01-01

The correct communication of the severity violence is essential in context legal trials, custody cases, support victims, etc., for providing fair treatment. A narrator that communicates their experiences interpersonal may rate seriousness incident differently than a rater reading narrator's text, suggesting there exist perceptual differences (PD) ratings between and rater. We propose these depend on whether narrative based physical or psychological violence, gender differences. Physical be...

10.1371/journal.pone.0255785 article EN cc-by PLoS ONE 2021-08-18

Abstract In forensic contexts it is common that witnesses retell and discuss the experienced event many times. It of importance to understand how this influences memory meta‐memory. Eighty‐nine participants viewed a short film were assigned one four conditions: (1) Laboratory discussion (five discussions with confederate), (2) Family family member), (3) Retell retellings event) (4) Control. Three weeks later gave an open free recall, then 3 days confidence judged recalled information. The...

10.1002/acp.1749 article EN Applied Cognitive Psychology 2010-10-04

10.1037//0033-295x.106.2.337 article IT Psychological Review 1999-01-01

Abstract Emotion researchers have long used clips from commercial movies to experimentally elicit emotional states. This paper describes how the Niedenthal laboratory selected and tested emotion-eliciting movie clips, presents data on clips’ effectiveness. A summary of published databases is presented discussed.

10.5406/musimoviimag.8.2.0058 article EN Music and the Moving Image 2015-06-05

Face recognition occurs when a face is recognised despite changes between learning and test exposures. Yet there has been relatively little research on how variations in emotional expressions influence people’s ability to recognise these changes. We evaluated the discriminate old similar of emotions (i.e. mnemonic discrimination) same face, as well discrimination dissimilar (new) reflecting traditional discrimination. An task with morphed faces that were but not identical original was used....

10.1080/20445911.2018.1493486 article EN Journal of Cognitive Psychology 2018-07-03
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