Denise Aparecida Passarelli
Federal University of São Carlos
7 Papers
10 Citations
Denise Aparecida Passarelli is an academic researcher from Federal University of São Carlos. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subliminal stimuli & Valence (psychology). The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 7 publications. Previous affiliations of Denise Aparecida Passarelli include National Institute of Standards and Technology.
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Papers
How Do I Feel? Identifying Emotional Expressions on Facebook Reactions Using Clustering Mechanism
Felipe Taliar Giuntini,Larissa Pires Ruiz,Luziane de Fátima Kirchner,Denise Aparecida Passarelli,Maria de Jesus Dutra dos Reis,Andrew T. Campbell,Jó Ueyama +6 more
TL;DR: Investigating whether the emoticons chosen by users in social network news actually express the emotions they wish to express suggests that the use of reactions in feelings analysis algorithms can increase the confidence in determining the emotion that the content reflects and the emotional state of the social network users.
Dissociating preferences from evaluations following subliminal conditioning
TL;DR: The present study demonstrates preferences may be influenced through subliminal conditioning even as evaluations are not, and across supraliminal CS, Bayesian and frequentist analyses indicated US valence was significant and likely to shift preferences and evaluations.
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Effects of orientation and differential reinforcement II: transitivity and transfer across five-member sets.
Micah Amd,Micah Amd,Marlon Alexandre de Oliveira,Denise Aparecida Passarelli,Lívia Gabriela Campos Balog,Julio C. de Rose +5 more
TL;DR: This work compared differences in multi-nodal transfer following Pavlovian and instrumental relational learning procedures, and tested whether functioning as 'end terms' in a relational series can mitigate transfer following instrumental conditioning.
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Exploring a Training IRAP as a single participant context for analyzing reversed derived relations and persistent rule‐following
Colin Harte,Dermot Barnes-Holmes,M.H. Moreira,João Henrique de Almeida,Denise Aparecida Passarelli,Julio C. de Rose +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a training version of implicit relational assessment procedure (IRAP) was used to establish and successfully reverse experimentally established derived relations, and the results suggested that the Training IRAP could successfully produce derived reversals.
12
Augmenting salivation, but not evaluations, through subliminal conditioning of eating-related words.
TL;DR: In this article, eating-related words (CS) with positively valenced words (US+) may augment eating-associated motivational responses (e.g., preingestive salivation) with minimal CS knowledge.
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