Micah Amd
University of the South Pacific
21 Papers
49 Citations
Micah Amd is an academic researcher from University of the South Pacific. The author has contributed to research in topics: Subliminal stimuli & Valence (psychology). The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 16 publications. Previous affiliations of Micah Amd include Federal University of São Carlos & Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital.
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Papers
A derived transfer of eliciting emotional functions using differences among electroencephalograms as a dependent measure.
TL;DR: Electroencephalographic data coincide with previous reports of emotion-specific EEG effects, indicating that the initial emotional impact of a stimulus may emerge based on direct stimulus pairing and derived stimulus relations.
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Assessing the Effects of a Relational Training Intervention on Fluid Intelligence Among a Sample of Socially Disadvantaged Children in Bangladesh
TL;DR: This article explored whether the amount of training undertaken can predict changes in intelligence test performances and assessed whether SMART training could be effective for a non-English speaking, socioeconomically disadvantaged cohort.
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.
18
Neurophysiological Effects Associated With Subliminal Conditioning of Appetite Motivations
Micah Amd,Sylvain Baillet +1 more
TL;DR: It is found significantly greater saliva production and declarations of increasing hunger after eating-related verbs were linked with positive terms, and a significant effect of valence during pre-lexical time windows.
Transforming valences through transitive inference: How are faces emotionally dissonant?:
Micah Amd,Bryan Roche +1 more
TL;DR: The lack of difference in pre vs. post contrasts of Stimulus C, which maintained a high valence, suggest that relational series membership may not suffice to mitigate emotionally dissonant information.