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Dive into the research topics where Robert G. Franklin is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert G. Franklin.


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2012

Amygdala responses to averted vs direct gaze fear vary as a function of presentation speed

Reginald B. Adams; Robert G. Franklin; Kestutis Kveraga; Nalini Ambady; Robert E. Kleck; Paul J. Whalen; Nouchine Hadjikhani; Anthony J. Nelson

We examined whether amygdala responses to rapidly presented fear expressions are preferentially tuned to averted vs direct gaze fear and conversely whether responses to more sustained presentations are preferentially tuned to direct vs averted gaze fear. We conducted three functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies to test these predictions including: Study 1: a block design employing sustained presentations (1 s) of averted vs direct gaze fear expressions taken from the Pictures of Facial Affect; Study 2: a block design employing rapid presentations (300 ms) of these same stimuli and Study 3: a direct replication of these studies in the context of a single experiment using stimuli selected from the NimStim Emotional Face Stimuli. Together, these studies provide evidence consistent with an early, reflexive amygdala response tuned to clear threat and a later reflective response tuned to ambiguous threat.


Brain Imaging and Behavior | 2010

The Nature of Processing Speed Deficits in Traumatic Brain Injury: is Less Brain More?

Frank G. Hillary; Helen M. Genova; John D. Medaglia; Neal M. Fitzpatrick; Kathy S. Chiou; Britney M. Wardecker; Robert G. Franklin; Jianli Wang; John DeLuca

The cognitive constructs working memory (WM) and processing speed are fundamental components to general intellectual functioning in humans and highly susceptible to disruption following neurological insult. Much of the work to date examining speeded working memory deficits in clinical samples using functional imaging has demonstrated recruitment of network areas including prefrontal cortex (PFC) and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC). What remains unclear is the nature of this neural recruitment. The goal of this study was to isolate the neural networks distinct from those evident in healthy adults and to determine if reaction time (RT) reliably predicts observable between-group differences. The current data indicate that much of the neural recruitment in TBI during a speeded visual scanning task is positively correlated with RT. These data indicate that recruitment in PFC during tasks of rapid information processing are at least partially attributable to normal recruitment of PFC support resources during slowed task processing.


Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience | 2011

The reward of a good joke: neural correlates of viewing dynamic displays of stand-up comedy

Robert G. Franklin; Reginald B. Adams

Humor is enjoyable, yet few studies to date have reported that humor engages brain regions involved in reward processing (i.e., the mesolimbic reward system). Even fewer have investigated socially relevant, dynamic displays of real actors telling jokes. Instead, many studies have focused on responses to static cartoons or written jokes in isolation. In the present investigation, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine brain activation in response to video clips of comedians performing stand-up comedy, a more socially relevant task than reading jokes or cartoons in isolation. Participants watched video clips of eight stand-up comedians, half female/half male, that were prerated by a separate group of participants from the same population as eliciting either high or low levels of amusement, thereby allowing us to control for comedian attributes and comedic style. We found that high-funny clips elicited more activation in several brain regions involved with reward responses, including the nucleus accumbens, caudate, and putamen. A regression with participants’ own ratings of humor revealed similar activity in reward areas as well as in regions involved in theory of mind. These findings indicate that dynamic social displays of humor do engage reward responses. The rewarding nature of humor may help explain why it is so valued socially.


Brain and Cognition | 2010

The two sides of beauty: Laterality and the duality of facial attractiveness

Robert G. Franklin; Reginald B. Adams

We hypothesized that facial attractiveness represents a dual judgment, a combination of reward-based, sexual processes, and aesthetic, cognitive processes. Herein we describe a study that demonstrates that sexual and nonsexual processes both contribute to attractiveness judgments and that these processes can be dissociated. Female participants rated the general attractiveness of faces presented in either their left or right visual field. In order to examine sexual and nonsexual components of these judgments, general attractiveness ratings were correlated with ratings of these same faces made by two independent groups of raters in two specific contexts, one sexual and one nonsexual. Based on an items analysis, partial correlation coefficients were computed for each individual and used as the dependent variable of interest in a 2 (laterality: right, left) by 2 (context: sexual, nonsexual) ANOVA. This analysis revealed an interaction such that faces rated in a sexual context better predicted attractiveness ratings of faces shown in the left than right visual field, whereas faces rated in a nonsexual context better predicted attractiveness of faces shown in the right than left visual field. This finding is consistent with the assertion that sexual and nonsexual preferences involve predominantly lateralized processing routes that independently contribute to what is perceived to be attractive.


Emotion | 2018

Reading the lines in the face: The contribution of angularity and roundness to perceptions of facial anger and joy.

Robert G. Franklin; Reginald B. Adams; Troy G. Steiner; Leslie A. Zebrowitz

Through 3 studies, we investigated whether angularity and roundness present in faces contributes to the perception of anger and joyful expressions, respectively. First, in Study 1 we found that angry expressions naturally contain more inward-pointing lines, whereas joyful expressions contain more outward-pointing lines. Then, using image-processing techniques in Studies 2 and 3, we filtered images to contain only inward-pointing or outward-pointing lines as a way to approximate angularity and roundness. We found that filtering images to be more angular increased how threatening and angry a neutral face was rated, increased how intense angry expressions were rated, and enhanced the recognition of anger. Conversely, filtering images to be rounder increased how warm and joyful a neutral face was rated, increased the intensity of joyful expressions, and enhanced recognition of joy. Together these findings show that angularity and roundness play a direct role in the recognition of angry and joyful expressions. Given evidence that angularity and roundness may play a biological role in indicating threat and safety in the environment, this suggests that angularity and roundness represent primitive facial cues used to signal threat−anger and warmth−joy pairings.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2010

Cross-cultural reading the mind in the eyes: An fmri investigation

Reginald B. Adams; Nicholas O. Rule; Robert G. Franklin; Elsie Wang; Michael T. Stevenson; Sakiko Yoshikawa; Mitsue Nomura; Wataru Sato; Kestutis Kveraga; Nalini Ambady


Motivation and Emotion | 2009

Influence of emotional expression on the processing of gaze direction

Reginald B. Adams; Robert G. Franklin


Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience | 2010

Culture, gaze and the neural processing of fear expressions

Reginald B. Adams; Robert G. Franklin; Nicholas O. Rule; Jonathan B. Freeman; Kestutis Kveraga; Nouchine Hadjikhani; Sakiko Yoshikawa; Nalini Ambady


Journal of Experimental Social Psychology | 2009

A dual-process account of female facial attractiveness preferences: Sexual and nonsexual routes.

Robert G. Franklin; Reginald B. Adams


Archive | 2010

Compound Social Cues in Human Face Processing

Reginald B. Adams; Robert G. Franklin; Anthony J. Nelson; Michael T. Stevenson

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Reginald B. Adams

Pennsylvania State University

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Nalini Ambady

Pennsylvania State University

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Anthony J. Nelson

Pennsylvania State University

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Michael T. Stevenson

Pennsylvania State University

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