Mark J. Fenske
Affiliations: | University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada |
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"Mark Fenske"Mean distance: 14.63 (cluster 23) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorScott Allen | research assistant | 1994-1996 | University of Lethbridge | |
John R. Vokey | research assistant | 1995-1996 | University of Lethbridge | |
Philip M. Merikle | grad student | 1996-1998 | University of Waterloo | |
Jennifer A. Stolz | grad student | 1998-2001 | University of Waterloo | |
(The common object hypothesis: Understanding when top-down and bottom-up influences interact in attentional processing.) | ||||
Jane E. Raymond | post-doc | 2001-2003 | University of Wales Bangor | |
Moshe Bar | post-doc | 2003-2007 | Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School |
Children
Sign in to add traineeElizabeth M. Clancy | grad student | University of Guelph | |
Rachel L. Driscoll | grad student | University of Guelph | |
Asma Hanif | grad student | University of Guelph | |
David De Vito | grad student | 2013- | University of Guelph |
Anne E. Ferrey | grad student | 2009-2012 | University of Guelph |
Alexandra Frischen | post-doc | 2009-2011 | University of Guelph |
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Publications
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Driscoll RL, Clancy EM, Fenske MJ. (2021) Motor-response execution versus inhibition alters social-emotional evaluations of specific individuals. Acta Psychologica. 215: 103290 |
Clancy EM, Fiacconi CM, Fenske MJ. (2019) Response inhibition immediately elicits negative affect and devalues associated stimuli: Evidence from facial electromyography. Progress in Brain Research. 247: 169-191 |
De Vito D, Ferrey AE, Fenske MJ, et al. (2018) Cognitive-behavioral and electrophysiological evidence of the affective consequences of ignoring stimulus representations in working memory. Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience |
Vito DD, Fenske M. (2018) Using affective ratings to test competing hypotheses about differences in active and accessory states in visual working memory. Journal of Vision. 18: 687-687 |
Vito DD, Fenske MJ. (2018) Affective evidence that inhibition is involved in separating accessory representations from active representations in visual working memory Visual Cognition. 26: 583-600 |
Driscoll RL, de Launay KQ, Fenske MJ. (2017) Less approach, more avoidance: Response inhibition has motivational consequences for sexual stimuli that reflect changes in affective value not a lingering global brake on behavior. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review |
De Vito D, Al-Aidroos N, Fenske MJ. (2017) Neural evidence that inhibition is linked to the affective devaluation of distractors that match the contents of working memory. Neuropsychologia |
De Vito D, Fenske MJ. (2017) Suppressing memories of words and familiar objects results in their affective devaluation: Evidence from Think/No-think tasks. Cognition. 162: 1-11 |
Boshyan J, Betz N, Feldman Barrett L, et al. (2017) THREAT - A database of line-drawn scenes to study threat perception Journal of Vision. 17: 302 |
Driscoll RL, Barclay P, Fenske MJ. (2016) To be spurned no more: The affective and behavioral consequences of social and nonsocial rejection. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review |