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1 d as more aversive (intense, unpleasant, and disgusting).
2 ual analysis of two threat subtypes-fear and disgust.
3 f negative emotions such as fear, anger, and disgust.
4 ditioned taste avoidance but not conditioned disgust.
5 nisms in alternative threat emotions such as disgust.
6 o recognize overtly different intensities of disgust.
7 of happiness and anger, but not for fear or disgust.
8 dicated a relative impairment in recognizing disgust.
9 r emotion-recognition impairments, including disgust.
10 eduction in the anterior insular response to disgust.
11 lated to bodily injury from those related to disgust.
12 tance of the basal ganglia in the emotion of disgust.
13 icted unique variance in pathogen and sexual disgust.
14 evoke appropriate behavioral responses, like disgust.
15 be a primary driver influencing variation in disgust.
16 ate case rates negatively predicted pathogen disgust.
17 is the amygdala for fear and the insula for disgust.
18 ting behavior and impairments in recognizing disgust.
19 ppiness, surprise, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust.
20 Facial expressions were neutral, fearful, or disgusted.
21 entified the food stimuli as threatening and disgusting.
22 ht have commented that parasites were rather disgusting.
23 ted intense saltiness as anything other than disgusting.
24 ias that correlate with neural signatures of disgust.(11) However, the causal role of gastric rhythm
25 r insular responses to facial expressions of disgust, a signifier of potential physical contamination
26 Infants generalize information about food disgust across all people, regardless of those people's
27 dentifies high levels of expressed anger and disgust across overall posts, it additionally reveals th
30 Potential cues include facial reactions of disgust, alarm-call vocalizations, and reduction in food
31 insular cortex but not the amygdala; strong disgust also activated structures linked to a limbic cor
32 edicted more impairment in recognizing fear, disgust and anger, and no impairment in recognizing faci
35 ings suggest that potentiation of the ASR by disgust and fear depends on the integrity of the anterom
36 ir convergence on the core affect of threat, disgust and fear instigate distinct response profiles, p
37 , the more participants reported feelings of disgust and fear; the less acidic the pH, the more they
38 untington's disease-associated modulation of disgust and happiness processing was negatively correlat
40 amework for testing the adaptive function of disgust and its associated disease avoidance behaviours
41 ants showed a higher accuracy in recognising disgust and lower misclassification rates and response b
42 ncerns the reason for the connection between disgust and specific political and moral attitudes; the
43 iation occurred in the partial regulation of disgust and taste avoidance by selective 5-HT(3) recepto
44 wledge that ingroup relations attenuate core disgust and that this helps explain the ability of group
47 ditions per subject: happiness, sadness, and disgust and three control conditions, each induced by fi
49 ofessionals have developed ways to cope with disgust and use empathy as a main strategy to overcome i
50 ored how healthcare professionals experience disgust and what coping strategies they use to manage it
52 hey were biased to label neutral faces with "disgust" and "fear." On odor identification, IED subject
53 value: (i) 'wanting what is remembered to be disgusting', and (ii) 'wanting what is predicted to hurt
54 l emotion recognition, particularly fear and disgust, and did not benefit from increased emotional in
57 dangers; react to threats with greater fear, disgust, and sadness; and develop more threat-based clin
58 V-2 positively predicted pathogen and sexual disgust, and state case rates negatively predicted patho
59 body expression representations of anger and disgust, and the influence of body on facial expression
60 WS from health to riddance of faeces-related disgust, and to increase the perceived descriptive norm
62 e intensities of happy, sad, angry, fearful, disgusted, and neutral faces, balanced for gender and et
63 suicide is intuitively considered impure and disgusting, and discuss implications of this purity-base
64 r threat-related emotions, such as "anger," "disgust," and "fear," but differ on those that represent
65 jects were impaired at recognizing "anger," "disgust," and "surprise," and they were biased to label
67 nal emotional states (happy, surprise, fear, disgust, anger, and sad) using the same facial movements
68 ched pictures of faces to the words "fear," "disgust," "anger," "sadness," "surprise," and "happiness
69 basic emotions-"happy," "surprise," "fear," "disgust," "anger," and "sad"-and judge their intensity i
70 perience of core and body-boundary-violation disgust are dissociable in both peripheral autonomic and
71 d (4) that among the five emotions, risk and disgust are least well-preserved, compared with joy, sad
74 emergence of discrimination between fear and disgust as early as 96 ms after stimulus emphasizes the
77 rably unpleasant) negative states, pain, and disgust, as conveyed by naturalistic facial expressions
82 role for disgust-related visceral changes in disgust avoidance, supporting the hypothesis that physio
83 measured the effects of domperidone on core disgust avoidance, using eye tracking to measure implici
85 chedelic", "mysterious"), profundity (e.g., "disgust", "awe"), and perceptual qualities attributed to
87 ined the brain correlates of the presence of disgusting behavior and impaired recognition of disgust
88 ume was associated with both the presence of disgusting behavior and impairments in recognizing disgu
90 gressive aphasia were most likely to exhibit disgusting behaviors and were, on average, the most impa
91 nalysis revealed that patients who exhibited disgusting behaviors had significantly less gray matter
93 of emotion-from anxiety to fear to horror to disgust, calmness to aesthetic appreciation to awe, and
94 jor prevailing accounts focus on morality or disgust, capturing a subset of cleansing effects, but ca
95 has demonstrated that facial expressions of disgust consistently engage different brain areas (insul
96 al, postcentral, and insular cortex, whereas disgust contexts triggered the temporoparietal cortex an
98 ressions; this enhanced amygdala response to disgust correlated with the magnitude of attentional red
99 physiological arousal we found that arousing disgust cues modulated the encoding of sensory noise.
100 vel psychophysical paradigm, in which unseen disgust-cues induced unexpected, unconscious arousal jus
102 especially those related to animal-reminder disgust (e.g., mutilated body), generate neural response
104 oral, physiological, and immune responses to disgust-evoking cues in both cocaine-dependent and healt
105 cipants (N = 61) were exposed to neutral and disgust-evoking photographs depicting food and nonfood i
109 attention enhanced the amygdala response to disgust expressions; this enhanced amygdala response to
110 neutral expressions; patients overattributed disgusted expressions and underattributed happy expressi
111 n of, and autonomic responding to, angry and disgusted expressions; attributing the emotions of fear,
113 cantly (P<0.005) smaller signal responses to disgusted faces in the bilateral insular cortex compared
116 lizations of four emotion categories (anger, disgust, fear, happiness) and neutral sounds under two c
117 8 females) with facial expressions of anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and emotional neutrali
118 atched video clips that consistently induced disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, or a control neutral
119 nts judged expressions of 6 emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise) with the lo
120 eight distinct categories: anger, contempt, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise, and neutral
124 Here, participants reported experienced disgust/fear and appraisals of sickness/harm risk to ima
126 ording to dissect experience of two distinct disgust forms and their relationship to peripheral and c
127 particularly affect people's recognition of disgust from facial expressions, and functional neuroima
129 The behavioral immune system posits that disgust functions to protect animals from pathogen expos
130 behavioral and neural divergence of fear and disgust further indicates that despite their convergence
133 e experience, expression, and recognition of disgust; however, whether this brain region is required
134 Greeble objects presented after fear versus disgust images also overlapped despite their clear depar
135 o measure implicit (oculomotor) avoidance of disgusting images (feces) before and after an "exposure"
136 perimental work does behavioral avoidance of disgusting images habituate following prolonged exposure
137 ntion (monetary reinforcement for looking at disgusting images).(7)(,)(8) We find that domperidone si
145 he feeling of disgust and the observation of disgust in others are known to activate the insula corte
146 ulating disgusting behaviors and recognizing disgust in others involve two partially overlapping neur
147 The neural response to facial expressions of disgust in others is thus closely related to appraisal o
149 consistently high trust/anticipation and low disgust in the way mainstream sources framed "vaccine/va
151 r, we found that overall and animal reminder disgust increased across pregnancy and after birth.
152 rt for emotion specificity: Sadness, but not disgust, increased self-reported craving relative to a n
153 based handwashing intervention combined with disgust-inducing messages, with provision of handwashing
154 ory perceptual and attentional processing of disgust information, akin to the central ecological func
159 of the three domains of disgust, only sexual disgust is associated with more deontological moral pref
161 s are seen as embedded within social groups, disgust is interpreted as socially universal, which coul
162 c conditions.(2-5) Unlike fear, pathological disgust is not improved substantially by exposure therap
171 condition than in the other conditions, and disgust mediated the relationship between condition and
174 lationship between current pathogen risk and disgust, nor the correlation between objective and perce
175 of anger (odds ratio = 0.12, p < 0.001) and disgust (odds ratio = 0.08, p < 0.001) relative to CT pa
176 ption include lack of prior experience, user disgust of working with excrement, and the perceived amo
177 esults indicate that of the three domains of disgust, only sexual disgust is associated with more deo
178 r brain areas process only facial signals of disgust or disgust signals from multiple modalities.
179 dence of relative impairments in recognizing disgust or fear, and no evidence to support a link betwe
181 his brain region is required for recognizing disgust or regulating disgusting behaviors remains unkno
182 nses to carefully controlled images of fear, disgust, or neutral emotion (as a baseline condition).
184 nd that individuals who experience anger and disgust over a norm violation are more likely to endorse
185 professionals should consider ways of making disgust part of a wider conversation, allowing clinician
186 hors investigated ASR modulation to fearful, disgusting, pleasant, and neutral stimuli in 12 patients
190 universal facial expressions of "fear" and "disgust." Rather than distributing their fixations evenl
191 iated with emetic drugs produces conditioned disgust reactions in rats (predominantly gaping), unlike
193 the production of nausea-induced conditioned disgust reactions, while activation of 5-HT(3) receptors
196 Conversely, scopolamine increased aversive 'disgust' reactions elicited by bitter quinine at all NAc
199 that participate in happiness, sadness, and disgust, regions that distinguish between positive and n
200 ow the experience of emotions like anger and disgust relate to the judged appropriateness of sanction
203 faster to approach and avoid faces depicting disgust relative to the placebo group, suggesting a sali
204 motion recognition suggest that detection of disgust relies on processing within the basal ganglia an
205 of interoception of bodily signals, aberrant disgust responses might lead to increased infection susc
209 ssify which of five categories--fear, anger, disgust, sadness, or happiness--is engaged by a study wi
210 ed the associations between The Three Domain Disgust Scale and the most commonly used 12 moral dilemm
211 anger are not built upon each other, whereas disgust seems to be the most elementary and specific bas
218 e Compensatory Prophylaxis Hypothesis (CPH), disgust sensitivity increases in times of immunosuppress
221 tastes in art to desire for closure and from disgust sensitivity to the tendency to pursue new inform
222 In contrast to the original study, where disgust sensitivity was highest in the first trimester,
226 fe history battery, past and current health, disgust sensitivity, and Big Five personality traits).
230 federates) to equally unpleasant painful and disgusting stimulations, as well as unfair monetary trea
232 rmal physiological conditions, perception of disgusting stimuli disrupts myoelectrical rhythms in the
233 ta provide evidence of a hypersensitivity to disgusting stimuli in cocaine-dependent individuals, pos
234 und in the deep gastric realm, we found that disgusting stimuli induced a significant increase in HRV
236 Remarkably, brain responses to a single disgusting stimulus were sufficient to make accurate pre
241 d: The professionals' struggle to talk about disgust; the importance of boundaries: boundary breachin
242 ents (joy, sadness, embarrassment, risk, and disgust-though the stories did not contain these emotion
243 ral and behavioral response between fear and disgust thus highlights general threat categorization in
244 ereof), and gender norms, and how we can use disgust to better activate native "behavioral immunity"
245 hat domperidone may weaken the "immunity" of disgust to habituation, putatively by reducing gastric d
246 , akin to the central ecological function of disgust to minimize contact with contagious objects to a
248 ociated with altered cognitive processing of disgust using (i) a covert recognition of faces task con
249 gusting behavior and impaired recognition of disgust using voxel-based morphometry in a sample of 305
251 that when participants observed fearful and disgusting video clips, they reported to perceive not on
254 ghly selective deficit in the recognition of disgust was confirmed in the subgroup of 15 individuals
257 wash hands and pumps of soap indicated that disgust was lower where the relationship between partici
260 (i.e., below conscious perception) associate disgust with high-calorie foods with the aim of reducing
262 a pseudo-randomized sequence of humorous and disgusting YouTube clips to autistic and non-autistic ad