Processing of emotional faces in sexual offenders with and without child victims: an eye-tracking study with pupillometry

2021 ◽  
pp. 108141
Author(s):  
Steven M. Gillespie ◽  
Ian J. Mitchell ◽  
Anthony R. Beech ◽  
Pia Rotshtein
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kathrin Cohen Kadosh ◽  
Simone P. Haller ◽  
Lena Schliephake ◽  
Mihaela Duta ◽  
Gaia Scerif ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 807-815 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. V. Pavlov ◽  
V. V. Korenyok ◽  
N. V. Reva ◽  
A. V. Tumyalis ◽  
K. V. Loktev ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (16) ◽  
pp. 1741-1756
Author(s):  
Judith Abulafia ◽  
Robert Epstein

Fixated pedophilic sexual attraction is considered to be a major determinant of risk among sex offenders, but there is little empirical evidence regarding its treatment. It was hypothesized that two prominent factors which have emerged in the literature as being present among some sexual offenders, namely, impersonal, narcissistic, and predatory patterns of offending against victims, and experiencing childhood sexual abuse, may be related to specifically to the strength of pedophilic interest. Such a relationship would provide a deeper understanding of the corollaries of pedophilic interest and would suggest targets for treatment. These factors were explored in a sample of 532 sexual offenders who attended the National Centre for Risk Assessment in Israel, and were found to be significantly related to the level of pedophilic interest in the sample. The implications for treatment of high-risk offenders are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (7) ◽  
pp. 2166-2183
Author(s):  
Shayne Sanscartier ◽  
Jessica A. Maxwell ◽  
Penelope Lockwood

Attachment avoidance (discomfort with closeness and intimacy) has been inconsistently linked to visual disengagement from emotional faces, with some studies finding disengagement toward specific emotional faces and others finding no effects. Although most studies use stranger faces as stimuli, it is likely that attachment effects would be most pronounced in the context of attachment relationships. The present study ( N = 92) combined ecologically valid stimuli (i.e., pictures of romantic partner’s face) with eye-tracking methods to more precisely test whether highly avoidant individuals are faster at disengaging from emotional faces. Unexpectedly, attachment avoidance had no effect on saccadic reaction time, regardless of face type or emotion. Instead, all participants took longer to disengage from romantic partner faces than from strangers’ faces, although this effect should be replicated in the future. Our results suggest that romantic attachments capture visual attention on an oculomotor level, regardless of one’s personal attachment orientations.


Author(s):  
Anna Kis ◽  
Anna Hernádi ◽  
Bernadett Miklósi ◽  
Orsolya Kanizsár ◽  
József Topál

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louisa Kulke ◽  
Lena Brümmer ◽  
Arezoo Pooresmaeili ◽  
Annekathrin Schacht

In everyday life, faces with emotional expressions quickly attract attention and eye-movements. To study the neural mechanisms of such emotion-driven attention by means of event-related brain potentials (ERPs), tasks that employ covert shifts of attention are commonly used, in which participants need to inhibit natural eye-movements towards stimuli. It remains, however, unclear how shifts of attention to emotional faces with and without eye-movements differ from each other. The current preregistered study aimed to investigate neural differences between covert and overt emotion-driven attention. We combined eye-tracking with measurements of ERPs to compare shifts of attention to faces with happy, angry or neutral expressions when eye-movements were either executed (Go conditions) or withheld (No-go conditions). Happy and angry faces led to larger EPN amplitudes, shorter latencies of the P1 component and faster saccades, suggesting that emotional expressions significantly affected shifts of attention. Several ERPs (N170, EPN, LPC), were augmented in amplitude when attention was shifted with an eye-movement, indicating an enhanced neural processing of faces if eye-movements had to be executed together with a reallocation of attention. However, the modulation of ERPs by facial expressions did not differ between the Go and No-go conditions, suggesting that emotional content enhances both covert and overt shifts of attention. In summary, our results indicate that overt and covert attention shifts differ but are comparably affected by emotional content.


2018 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Elisabeth Giel ◽  
Sarah Paganini ◽  
Irena Schank ◽  
Paul Enck ◽  
Stephan Zipfel ◽  
...  

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