scholarly journals Correction to: Self-bias effect: movement initiation to self-owned property is speeded for both approach and avoidance actions

Author(s):  
Tara Barton ◽  
Merryn D. Constable ◽  
Samuel Sparks ◽  
Ada Kritikos
2018 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-89 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lela Ivaz ◽  
Kim L Griffin ◽  
Jon Andoni Duñabeitia

Foreign language contexts impose a relative psychological and emotional distance in bilinguals. In our previous studies, we demonstrated that the use of a foreign language changes the strength of the seemingly automatic emotional responses in the self-paradigm, showing a robust asymmetry in the self-bias effect in a native and a foreign language context. Namely, larger effects were found in the native language, suggesting an emotional blunting in the foreign language context. In the present study, we investigated the source of these effects by directly comparing whether they stem from a language’s foreignness versus its non-nativeness. We employed the same self-paradigm (a simple perceptual matching task of associating simple geometric shapes with the labels “you,” “friend,” and “other”), testing unbalanced Spanish–Basque–English trilinguals. We applied the paradigm to three language contexts: native, non-native but contextually present (i.e., non-native local), and non-native foreign. Results showed a smaller self-bias only in the foreign language pointing to the foreign-language-induced psychological/emotional distance as the necessary prerequisite for foreign language effects. Furthermore, we explored whether perceived emotional distance towards foreign languages in Spanish–English bilinguals modulates foreign language effects. Results suggest that none of the different indices of emotional distance towards the foreign language obtained via questionnaires modulated the self-biases in the foreign language contexts. Our results further elucidate the deeply rooted and automatic nature of foreign-language-driven differential emotional processing.


2006 ◽  
Vol 910 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuela Vieira ◽  
P. Louro ◽  
A. Fantoni ◽  
M. Fernandes ◽  
G. Lavareda ◽  
...  

AbstractStacked ITO/(a-SiC:H)pinpi /(a-Si:H)i'sn/ITO color sensitive detectors are analyzed using the laser scanned photodiode technique. Results show that band gap engineering together with the laser scanned photodiode technique allows a voltage controlled shift of the collection regions, allowing color discrimination at readout voltage that cancels the self-bias effect induced by the steady state illumination, across the back diode. The threshold voltage between green and red discrimination depends on the thickness ratio between a-Si:H (-i')/a-SiCH (-i) layers. As this ratio increases the self-reverse effect due to the front absorption will be balanced by the decrease of the self-forward effect due to the back absorption shifting the threshold voltage to lower reverse bias. The various design parameters and the optical readout process trade-offs are discussed and supported by a 2D numerical simulation. A self-bias model is proposed to explain the voltage controlled spectral sensitivity.


2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 063502 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Rafalskyi ◽  
A. Aanesland

2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (6) ◽  
pp. 063501 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwang-Tae Hwang ◽  
Se-Jin Oh ◽  
Ik-Jin Choi ◽  
Chin-Wook Chung

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Harry Farmer ◽  
Antonio Cataldo ◽  
Nagela Adel ◽  
Emma Wignall ◽  
Vittorio Gallese ◽  
...  

The sense of self lies at the heart of conscious experience, anchoring our disparate perceptions, emotions, thoughts and actions into a unitary whole. There is a growing consensus that sensory information about the body plays a central role in structuring this basic sense of self. Depersonalisation (DP) is an intriguing form of altered subjective experience in which people report feelings of unreality and detachment from their sense of self. Previous studies in healthy adults have showed a self-bias effect, namely a greater enhancement of accuracy in detecting touch applied to one’s own face when viewing touch on the self versus other’s face. The current study used the Visual Remapping of Touch (VRT) paradigm to explore self-bias in visual tactile integration in non-clinical participants reporting high and low levels of depersonalisation experiences. Participants observed images of their own face, the face of another person or a ball being touched or not touched either unilaterally or bilaterally while being asked to detect unilateral or bilateral tactile stimulation on their own cheeks. The current study revealed that participants high in DP showed an increased overall VRT effect but a no self-face bias, instead showing a greater VRT effect when observing the face of another person. In addition, across all participants, self-bias was negatively predicted by the occurrence of anomalous body experiences suggesting that this effect was specifically linked to disruptions in the perception of the bodily self. These results provide evidence for disrupted integration of tactile and visual representations of the bodily self in those experiencing high DP and provide greater understanding of how disruptions in multisensory perception of the self may underlie the phenomenology of depersonalisation.


2009 ◽  
Vol 1153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Augusto Vieira ◽  
Manuela Vieira ◽  
Paula Louro ◽  
Miguel Fernandes ◽  
Alessandro Fantoni ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this paper single and stacked structures that can be used as wavelength selective devices, in the visible range, are analysed. Two terminal heterojunctions ranging from p-ií-n to p-i-n-p-i’-n configurations are studied. Three terminals double staked junctions with transparent contacts in-between are also considered to increase wavelength discrimination. The color discrimination was achieved by ac photocurrent measurement under different externally applied bias. Experimental data on spectral response analysis and current –voltage characteristics are reported. A theoretical analysis and an electrical simulation procedure are performed to support the wavelength selective behaviour. Good agreement between experimental and simulated data was achieved. Results show that in the single p-i-n configuration the device acts mainly as an optical switch while in the double ones, due to the self bias effect, the input channels are selectively tuned by shifting between positive and negative bias. If the internal terminal is used the inter-wavelength cross talk is reduced and the S/N increased.


1998 ◽  
Vol 529 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sinder ◽  
G. Sade ◽  
J. Pelleg

AbstractSputter-deposited titanium boride diffusion barrier layers have been found to be boron enriched when r.f substrate bias was applied. In the present experiments titanium boride was deposited by co-sputtering from Ti and B pure targets in Ar discharge and the voltage of r.f. self-bias was in the range of 100 – 250 V. Films deposited were found by Auger electron spectroscopy to be B enriched with increasing bias voltage at constant Ti and B sputtering rates. A model of the sputter-deposition conditions was developed to predict the composition and the thickness of the growing film. The model explains the experimental results indicating that B enrichment is mainly a result of differential resputtering of the components from the growing film by energetic Ar ions captured from the r.f discharge.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 053503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matt Wiebold ◽  
Yung-Ta Sung ◽  
John E. Scharer

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