Christopher A. Bailey
Yale University
10 Papers
110 Citations
Christopher A. Bailey is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social relation & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 10 publications.
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Papers
Differentiating Forms and Functions of Aggression in Emerging Adults: Associations with Hostile Attribution Biases and Normative Beliefs
TL;DR: The authors found that reactive physical aggression was uniquely associated with hostile attribution biases for instrumental provocation situations, while reactive relational aggression was associated with relational provocation scenarios and impulsivity associated with all subtypes of aggression.
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Atypical neural specialization for social percepts in autism spectrum disorder
TL;DR: Results suggest that individuals with autism display atypical neural specialization for social information but intact specialization for nonsocial information, concord with the notion of specific dysfunction in social brain systems rather than nonspecific information-processing difficulties in autism.
Risk-taking and the feedback negativity response to loss among at-risk adolescents.
Michael J. Crowley,Jianrong Wu,Clifford L Crutcher,Christopher A. Bailey,Carl W. Lejuez,Linda C. Mayes +5 more
TL;DR: The feedback error-related negativity (fERN), an event-related potential (ERP) that occurs when an expected reward does not occur, was examined in a game in which choices lead to monetary gains and losses with feedback delayed 1 or 2 s.
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Social Interaction Moderates Human-Robot Trust-Reliance Relationship and Improves Stress Coping
Monika Lohani,Charlene K. Stokes,Marissa McCoy,Christopher A. Bailey,Susan E. Rivers +4 more
- 07 Mar 2016
TL;DR: It is shown that social interaction moderated the effect of trust on reliance such that higher trust led to greater reliance on the robot and the experimental condition also had higher perceived stress coping abilities.
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Deviant ERP Response to Spoken Non-Words Among Adolescents Exposed to Cocaine In Utero
TL;DR: Findings suggest that children with PCE have atypical neural responses to spoken language stimuli during low-level phonological processing and at a later stage of processing of spoken stimuli.
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