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Dive into the research topics where Kenta Ishikawa is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenta Ishikawa.


Brain and Cognition | 2013

No trust on the left side: Hemifacial asymmetries for trustworthiness and emotional expressions

Matia Okubo; Kenta Ishikawa; Akihiro Kobayashi

People can discriminate cheaters from cooperators by their appearance. However, successful cheater detection can be thwarted by a posed smile, which cheaters display with greater emotional intensity than cooperators. The present study investigated the underlying neural and cognitive mechanisms of a posed smile, which cheaters use to conceal their anti-social attitude, in terms of hemifacial asymmetries of emotional expressions. Raters (50 women and 50 men) performed trustworthiness judgments on composite faces of cheaters and cooperators, operationally defined by the number of deceptions in an economic game. The left-left composites of cheaters were judged to be more trustworthy than the right-right composites when the models posed a happy expression. This left-hemiface advantage for the happy expression was not observed for cooperators. In addition, the left-hemiface advantage of cheaters disappeared for the angry expression. These results suggest that cheaters used the left hemiface, which is connected to the emotional side of the brain (i.e., the right hemisphere), more effectively than the right hemiface to conceal their anti-social attitude.


Cognition & Emotion | 2011

Automatic semantic association between emotional valence and brightness in the right hemisphere

Matia Okubo; Kenta Ishikawa

Positive words (e.g., faith) were recognised better when presented in white fonts than in black fonts, whereas the opposite was true for negative words (e.g., enemy). A neural basis for this type of association between emotional valence and brightness was investigated using a visual half-field paradigm. Positive and negative words were presented in black or white fonts and presented to the left visual field–right hemisphere (LVF–RH) or right visual field–left hemisphere (RVF–LH) in a word valence judgement task (i.e., positive vs. negative). A cross-over interaction between emotional valence and brightness was observed; valence judgements were facilitated when a positive word appeared in white and when a negative word appeared in black. This interaction was qualified by a higher-order interaction. The cross-over interaction appeared only for LVF–RH trials, suggesting that the right hemisphere was responsible for the association between emotional valence and brightness.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Overestimation of the Subjective Experience of Time in Social Anxiety: Effects of Facial Expression, Gaze Direction, and Time Course

Kenta Ishikawa; Matia Okubo

It is known that threatening stimuli increase emotional arousal, resulting in overestimating the subjective experience of passing time. Moreover, facial expressions and gaze direction interact to create socially threatening situations in people with social anxiety. The present study investigated the effect of social anxiety on the perceived duration of observing emotional faces with a direct or an averted gaze. Participants were divided into high, medium and low social anxiety groups based on social anxiety inventory scores. Participants then performed a temporal bisection task. Participants with high social anxiety provided larger overestimates for neutral faces with an averted gaze than those with low social anxiety in the second half of the task, whereas these differences were not found for angry face with direct and averted gaze. These results suggest that people with social anxiety perceive the duration of threatening situations as being longer than true durations based on objectively measured time.


Laterality: Asymmetries of Body, Brain and Cognition | 2018

The cheek of a cheater: Effects of posing the left and right hemiface on the perception of trustworthiness

Matia Okubo; Kenta Ishikawa; Akihiro Kobayashi

ABSTRACT Our cognitive mechanisms are designed to detect cheaters in social exchanges. However, cheater detection can be thwarted by a posed smile, which cheaters display with greater emotional intensity than cooperators. The present study investigated the role of hemifacial asymmetries in the perception of trustworthiness using face photographs with left and right cheek poses. Participants (N = 170) observed face photographs of cheaters and cooperators in an economic game. In the photographs, models expressed happiness or anger and turned slightly to the left or right to show their left or right cheeks to the camera. When the models expressed anger on their faces, cheaters showing the right cheek were rated as less trustworthy than cooperators (irrespective of cheeks shown) and cheaters showing the left cheek. When the models expressed happiness, trustworthiness ratings increased and did not differ between cheaters and cooperators, and no substantial asymmetries were observed. These patterns were replicated even when the face photographs were mirror-reversed. These results suggest that a cheater’s fake smile conceals an uncooperative attitude that is displayed in the right hemiface, ultimately disguising cheater detection.


Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry | 2018

Effects of social anxiety on metaphorical associations between emotional valence and clothing brightness

Kenta Ishikawa; Hikaru Suzuki; Matia Okubo

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES Individuals with social anxiety have various types of deficiencies in emotional processing. Diversity of deficiencies may imply that socially anxious individuals have malfunctions in fundamental parts of emotional processing. Therefore, we hypothesized that social anxiety contributes to deficiencies in building on the metaphorical relationship between emotional experience and brightness. METHODS We conducted a judgment task of valences of faces with manipulated clothing brightness (bright or dark). RESULTS A congruency effect between the emotional valence and clothing brightness was observed in participants with low social anxiety. However, this pattern was not found in participants with high social anxiety. The results suggested that a deficiency in metaphorical associations leads to maladaptive emotional processing in individuals with social anxiety. LIMITATIONS Our findings cannot be directly generalized to clinical populations. Such populations should be tested in the future studies. CONCLUSIONS We may expand Lakoff and Johnsons (1999) conceptual metaphor theory by showing the relationships between social anxiety and malfunction in metaphorical processing. Malfunctions in metaphorical processing could lead to various types of psychological disorders which have deficiencies in emotional processing.


Evolutionary Psychology | 2015

Cool Guys and Warm Husbands The Effect of Smiling on Male Facial Attractiveness for Short- and Long-Term Relationships

Matia Okubo; Kenta Ishikawa; Akihiro Kobayashi; Bruno Laeng; Luca Tommasi

While smiling enhances women’s facial attractiveness, the findings are inconclusive for men. The present study investigated the effect of smiling on male facial attractiveness for short- and long-term prospective partners using East Asian and European samples. In Experiment 1 (N = 218), where female participants rated male facial attractiveness, the facilitative effect of smiling was present when judging long-term partners but absent for short-term partners. This pattern was observed for East Asians as well as for Europeans. Experiment 2 (N = 71) demonstrated that smiling male faces engendered an impression suitable for long-term partnership (e.g., high ratings of trustworthiness) while neutral faces produced an impression suitable for short-term partnership (e.g., high ratings of masculinity). We discuss these results in terms of opposing evolutionary strategies in mate choice: heritable benefit versus paternal investment.


Journal of Nonverbal Behavior | 2012

A Fake Smile Thwarts Cheater Detection

Matia Okubo; Akihiro Kobayashi; Kenta Ishikawa


Journal of Nonverbal Behavior | 2017

Can I Trust You? Laterality of Facial Trustworthiness in an Economic Game

Matia Okubo; Kenta Ishikawa; Akihiro Kobayashi; Hikaru Suzuki


Japanese Journal of Psychology | 2012

Judgment of gaze direction related to social anxiety: Facial expressions and interpretation biases.

Kenta Ishikawa; Yoko Okamura; Matia Okubo


Neurobiology of Aging | 2019

Age-related differences in the activation of the mentalizing- and reward-related brain regions during the learning of others' true trustworthiness

Atsunobu Suzuki; Mika Ueno; Kenta Ishikawa; Akihiro Kobayashi; Matia Okubo; Toshiharu Nakai

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Luca Tommasi

University of Chieti-Pescara

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