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Dive into the research topics where Jean-Christophe Rohner is active.

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Featured researches published by Jean-Christophe Rohner.


Cognition & Emotion | 2002

The time-course of visual threat processing: High trait anxious individuals eventually avert their gaze from angry faces

Jean-Christophe Rohner

Several experiments have shown that anxious individuals have an attentional bias towards threat cues. It is also known, however, that exposure to a subjectively threatening but relatively harmless stimulus tends to lead to a reduction in fear. Accordingly, some authors have hypothesised that high trait anxious individuals have a vigilant-avoidant pattern of visual attention to threatening stimuli. In the present study, 52 high trait anxious and 48 low trait anxious subjects were shown pairs of emotional faces, while their direction of gaze was continuously monitored. For 0-1000 ms, both groups were found to view angry faces more than happy faces. For 2000-3000 ms, however, only high trait anxious subjects averted their gaze from angry faces more than they did from happy faces.


Cognition & Emotion | 2004

Memory-based attentional biases: Anxiety is linked to threat avoidance.

Jean-Christophe Rohner

The purpose of the present research was to examine if anxiety is linked to a memory-based attentional bias, in which attention to threat is thought to depend on implicit learning. Memory-based attentional biases were defined and also demonstrated in two experiments. A total of 168 university students were shown a pair of faces that varied in their emotional


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2011

Physical attractiveness stereotype and memory.

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Anders Rasmussen

content (angry, neutral, and happy), with each type of emotion being consistently preceded by a particular neutral cue face, appearing in the same position. Eye movements were measured during these cue faces and during the emotional faces. The results of two experiments indicated that anxiety was connected with a tendency to avert ones gaze from the positions of angry faces to the positions of happy faces, before these were shown on the screen. This, in turn, caused a reduced perception of angry relative to happy faces. In Experiment 2, participants were also not aware of having a memory-based attentional bias.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2012

Recognition bias and the physical attractiveness stereotype.

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Anders Rasmussen

Three experiments examined explicit and implicit memory for information that is congruent with the physical attractiveness stereotype (i.e. attractive-positive and unattractive-negative) and information that is incongruent with the physical attractiveness stereotype (i.e. attractive-negative and unattractive-positive). Measures of explicit recognition sensitivity and implicit discriminability revealed a memorial advantage for congruent compared to incongruent information, as evident from hit and false alarm rates and reaction times, respectively. Measures of explicit memory showed a recognition bias toward congruent compared to incongruent information, where participants tended to call congruent information old, independently of whether the information had been shown previously or not. This recognition bias was unrelated to reports of subjective confidence in retrieval. The present findings shed light on the cognitive mechanisms that might mediate discriminatory behavior towards physically attractive and physically unattractive individuals.


Perceptual and Motor Skills | 2012

Reading times and adpative styles among patients diagnosed with psychosis as assessed by the serial color-word test

Jan-Åke Jansson; Håkan Johansson; Per Johnsson; Jean-Christophe Rohner

Previous studies have found a recognition bias for information consistent with the physical attractiveness stereotype (PAS), in which participants believe that they remember that attractive individuals have positive qualities and that unattractive individuals have negative qualities, regardless of what information actually occurred. The purpose of this research was to examine whether recognition bias for PAS congruent information is replicable and invariant across a variety of conditions (i.e. generalizable). The effects of nine different moderator variables were examined in two experiments. With a few exceptions, the effect of PAS congruence on recognition bias was independent of the moderator variables. The results suggest that the tendency to believe that one remembers information consistent with the physical attractiveness stereotype is a robust phenomenon.


Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2006

Do self-presentation concerns moderate the relationship between implicit and explicit homonegativity measures?

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Fredrik Björklund

The present study focuses on how patients diagnosed with psychosis deal with a conflicting situation. In the study, two groups of patients were assessed. One group consisted of patients diagnosed with psychosis (n = 41), while the comparison group (n = 135) consisted of inpatients diagnosed either with anorexia nervosa or with bulimia nervosa. The groups were assessed using the Serial Color Word Test (S–CWT), designed for studying an individuals successive adaptation over time to a conflicting situation. The S–CWT differentiated the two groups regarding both reading time and adaptive styles. Patients diagnosed with psychosis had longer reading times and an adaptive style that was deviant throughout the test, indicating poorer cognitive functioning and more serious psychopathology. These problems may in turn influence functioning in work or study and daily living, all of which are important in treatment planning.


XXVII International Congress in Psychology, 2000 | 2000

Attentional bias in trait anxiety: Measures of eye-movements, facial muscle activity, and skin conductance

Jean-Christophe Rohner


Lund Psychological Reports; 10(1) (2009) | 2009

The Indirect and Direct Attitude Measure (IDAM)

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Johan Mårtensson; Martin Geisler; Samantha Sinclair; Josefin Zetterberg


Lund Psychological Reports; Vol 8 no 2 (2007) | 2007

Physical attractiveness stereotype and memory

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Anders Rasmussen


Lund Psychological Reports; Vol 8 no 1 (2007) | 2007

Transforming fiction into fact: Flawed reality—monitoring of socially sensitive person—information

Jean-Christophe Rohner; Fredrik Björklund; Johan Mårtensson

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