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Shlomo Bentin [13]S. Bentin [2]Sebastián Calderón Bentin [1]
  1.  41
    Inherently Ambiguous: Facial Expressions of Emotions, in Context.Ran R. Hassin,Hillel Aviezer &Shlomo Bentin -2013 -Emotion Review 5 (1):60-65.
    With a few yet increasing number of exceptions, the cognitive sciences enthusiastically endorsed the idea that there are basic facial expressions of emotions that are created by specific configurations of facial muscles. We review evidence that suggests an inherent role for context in emotion perception. Context does not merely change emotion perception at the edges; it leads to radical categorical changes. The reviewed findings suggest that configurations of facial muscles are inherently ambiguous, and they call for a different approach towards (...) the understanding of facial expressions of emotions. Prices of sticking with the modal view, and advantages of an expanded view, are succinctly reviewed. (shrink)
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  2.  105
    Conscious awareness is necessary for processing race and gender information from faces.Ido Amihai,Leon Deouell &Shlomo Bentin -2011 -Consciousness and Cognition 20 (2):269-279.
    Previous studies suggested that emotions can be correctly interpreted from facial expressions in the absence of conscious awareness of the face. Our goal was to explore whether subordinate information about a face’s gender and race could also become available without awareness of the face. Participants classified the race or the gender of unfamiliar faces that were ambiguous with regard to these dimensions. The ambiguous faces were preceded by face-images that unequivocally represented gender and race, rendered consciously invisible by simultaneous continuous-flash-suppression. (...) The classification of ambiguous faces was biased away from the category of the adaptor only when it was consciously visible. The duration of subjective visibility correlated with the aftereffect strength. Moreover, face identity was consequential only if consciously perceived. These results suggest that while conscious awareness is not needed for basic level categorization, it is needed for subordinate categorization. Emotional information might be unique in this respect. (shrink)
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  3.  47
    Spreading Activation in an Attractor Network With Latching Dynamics: Automatic Semantic Priming Revisited.Itamar Lerner,Shlomo Bentin &Oren Shriki -2012 -Cognitive Science 36 (8):1339-1382.
    Localist models of spreading activation (SA) and models assuming distributed representations offer very different takes on semantic priming, a widely investigated paradigm in word recognition and semantic memory research. In this study, we implemented SA in an attractor neural network model with distributed representations and created a unified framework for the two approaches. Our models assume a synaptic depression mechanism leading to autonomous transitions between encoded memory patterns (latching dynamics), which account for the major characteristics of automatic semantic priming in (...) humans. Using computer simulations, we demonstrated how findings that challenged attractor‐based networks in the past, such as mediated and asymmetric priming, are a natural consequence of our present model’s dynamics. Puzzling results regarding backward priming were also given a straightforward explanation. In addition, the current model addresses some of the differences between semantic and associative relatedness and explains how these differences interact with stimulus onset asynchrony in priming experiments. (shrink)
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  4.  66
    Meaningful processing of meaningless stimuli: The influence of perceptual experience on early visual processing of faces.Shlomo Bentin &Yulia Golland -2002 -Cognition 86 (1):B1-B14.
  5.  27
    Familiarity effects on categorization levels of faces and objects.David Anaki &Shlomo Bentin -2009 -Cognition 111 (1):144-149.
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  6.  57
    Integrating the Automatic and the Controlled: Strategies in Semantic Priming in an Attractor Network With Latching Dynamics.Itamar Lerner,Shlomo Bentin &Oren Shriki -2014 -Cognitive Science 38 (8):1562-1603.
    Semantic priming has long been recognized to reflect, along with automatic semantic mechanisms, the contribution of controlled strategies. However, previous theories of controlled priming were mostly qualitative, lacking common grounds with modern mathematical models of automatic priming based on neural networks. Recently, we introduced a novel attractor network model of automatic semantic priming with latching dynamics. Here, we extend this work to show how the same model can also account for important findings regarding controlled processes. Assuming the rate of semantic (...) transitions in the network can be adapted using simple reinforcement learning, we show how basic findings attributed to controlled processes in priming can be achieved, including their dependency on stimulus onset asynchrony and relatedness proportion and their unique effect on associative, category-exemplar, mediated and backward prime-target relations. We discuss how our mechanism relates to the classic expectancy theory and how it can be further extended in future developments of the model. (shrink)
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  7.  41
    Semantic Boost on Episodic Associations: An Empirically‐Based Computational Model.Yaron Silberman,Shlomo Bentin &Risto Miikkulainen -2007 -Cognitive Science 31 (4):645-671.
    Words become associated following repeated co-occurrence episodes. This process might be further determined by the semantic characteristics of the words. The present study focused on how semantic and episodic factors interact in incidental formation of word associations. First, we found that human participants associate semantically related words more easily than unrelated words; this advantage increased linearly with repeated co-occurrence. Second, we developed a computational model, SEMANT, suggesting a possible mechanism for this semantic-episodic interaction. In SEMANT, episodic associations are implemented through (...) lateral connections between nodes in a pre-existent self-organized map of word semantics. These connections are strengthened at each instance of concomitant activation, proportionally with the amount of the overlapping activity waves of activated nodes. In computer simulations SEMANT replicated the dynamics of associative learning in humans and led to testable predictions concerning normal associative learning as well as impaired learning in a diffuse semantic system like that characteristic of schizophrenia. (shrink)
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  8.  28
    Psychophysiological indices of implicit memory performance.Shlomo Bentin &Morris Moscovitch -1990 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 28 (4):346-352.
  9.  36
    Accounts for the N170 face-effect: a reply to Rossion, Curran, & Gauthier.Shlomo Bentin &David Carmel -2002 -Cognition 85 (2):197-202.
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  10. Alexandre pouget, Jean-Christophe ducom, Jeffrey torri and Daphne bavelier (university of rochester) multisensory spatial representations in eye-centered coordinates for reaching, b1–b11.David Carmel,Shlomo Bentin,Chang Hong Liu,Avi Chaudhuri,David A. Lagnado &David R. Shanks -2002 -Cognition 83:323-325.
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  11. Acknowledgment: Guest Reviewers.Fred Adams,Shaaron Ainsworth,Gerry Altmann,Louise Antony,Michael Arbib,Jennifer Arnold,Bruno Bara,William Bechtel,Shlomo Bentin &Benjamin Bergen -2003 -Cognitive Science 27:949-950.
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  12. Kennett, S., 83, B25 Kirkham, NZ, 83, B35.C. P. Beaman,S. Bentin,I. Berent,E. M. Brannon, Brockmole Jr,D. Carmel,A. Chaudhuri,K. Ferenz,W. T. Fitch &J. Fodor -2002 -Cognition 83:321.
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  13.  60
    Linguistic theory and psychological reality: a reply to Boudelaa & Marslen-Wilson.Shlomo Bentin &Ram Frost -2001 -Cognition 81 (1):113-118.
  14. On the dependence and independence of implicit and explicit measures of memory.S. Bentin &M. Moscovitch -1989 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (6):489-489.
  15.  36
    Semantic awareness in a nonlexical task.Shlomo Bentin &Leonard Katz -1984 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (5):381-384.
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