Ying Wang
Chinese Academy of Sciences
19 Papers
46 Citations
Ying Wang is an academic researcher from Chinese Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual perception & Perception. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 19 publications. Previous affiliations of Ying Wang include Center for Excellence in Education.
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Papers
Heritable aspects of biological motion perception and its covariation with autistic traits.
TL;DR: The findings demonstrate that the ability to process BM, especially with regard to its inherent kinetics, is heritable and advance the understanding of the sources of the linkage between autistic symptoms and BM perception deficits, opening up the possibility of treating the ability of local BM information as a distinct hallmark of social cognition.
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Heritability of reflexive social attention triggered by eye gaze and walking direction: common and unique genetic underpinnings
TL;DR: The findings of this study suggest that human social attention ability is supported by unique genetic mechanisms that can be shared across different social, but not non-social, processing and encourage the identification of ‘social attention genes’.
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Subconscious processing reveals dissociable contextual modulations of visual size perception
TL;DR: The results indicate that contextual information can modulate visual size perception without conscious awareness, and the dissociated modulation effects further suggest that subconscious contextual modulation takes place in the early visual processing stream and is largely independent of high-level feedback influences.
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Developmental tuning of reflexive attentional effect to biological motion cues.
TL;DR: It is found that children as early as 4 years old, like adults, showed a robust reflexive attentional orienting effect to the walking direction of an upright point-light walker, indicating that biological motion signals can automatically direct spatial attention at an early age.
Conscious Access to Suppressed Threatening Information Is Modulated by Working Memory
TL;DR: The delayed-match-to-sample paradigm in conjunction with continuous flash suppression found that suppressed threatening faces emerged from suppression faster when they matched the emotional valence of WM contents than when they did not.
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