Yang Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
5 Papers
31 Citations
Yang Wang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attentional control & Attentional bias. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications. Previous affiliations of Yang Wang include The Chinese University of Hong Kong.
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Papers
The near-miss effect in slot-machine gambling: modulation of feedback-related negativity by subjective value.
Qiuling Luo,Yang Wang,Chen Qu +2 more
TL;DR: Analysis of event-related potentials revealed that the size of FRN (feedback-related negativity) for a near miss is between the full miss and the win, suggesting that participants distinguish among near misses, full misses, and wins during the early evaluation phase.
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The altered early components and the decisive later process underlying attention bias modification in social anxiety: evidence from event-related potentials
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used EEG recordings to assess whether and how the 4-week ABM period affected emotional symptoms and specific emotional processing, and found that the two training groups (AMP and ACC) produced comparable emotional improvements and both showed a decrease in negative bias compared with the passive waiting group.
Outcome Evaluation in Social Comparison: When You Deviate from Others
Shinan Sun,Yang Wang,Xuejun Bai +2 more
TL;DR: The authors used a two self-outcomes × three others' outcomes within-participant design to investigate the effect of the deviation degree of the self versus others in the social comparison context.
Cognitive Training Modulates Cognitive Processes of the Brain: The Response Inhibition Improved by Attention Training
Yang Wang,Yi Wang,Xuebing Li +2 more
- 16 Jul 2018
TL;DR: Findings revealed that the participants had an increasing N2 in Go/No-go task, indicating attention training enhanced conflict monitoring function, and the topographic map suggested that the N2 components was associated with the frontal lobe and P3 components might beassociated with the parietal lobe.
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Like or Dislike? Affective Preference Modulates Neural Response to Others' Gains and Losses
TL;DR: Feedback related negativity (FRN), an ERP component sensitive to negative feedback, is examined to suggest that, at least in females, the neural response is influenced by a short-term induced affective preference.