| 1 | On the relationship between valence and arousal in samples across the globe. | 3.5 | 44 | Citations (PDF) |
| 2 | Distorted correlations among censored data: causes, effects, and correction | 2.8 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 3 | Deconstructing disgust as the emotion of violations of body and soul. | 3.5 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 4 | Facial Expressions 2021, , 2894-2899 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 5 | Psychological construction of episodes called emotions. | 0.4 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 6 | The rise of affectivism | 10.8 | 160 | Citations (PDF) |
| 7 | On evidence for a dozen new basic emotions: A methodological critique. | 3.5 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 8 | Do community and autonomy moral violations elicit different emotions? | 2.2 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 9 | On Judging the Immorality of Someone Having Taken His or Her Own Life | 0.7 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 10 | Disgust and the sacred: Do people react to violations of the sacred with the same emotion they react to something putrid? | 3.5 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 11 | Facial Expressions 2019, , 1-7 | | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 12 | Facial expressions as performances in mime | 2.4 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 13 | On an Observer’s Reaction to Hearing of Someone Harming Him or Herself | 1.0 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 14 | Children can create a new emotion category through a process of elimination | 1.7 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 15 | Rejoinder to Kret and Straffon | 2.8 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 16 | Facial Expressions 2018, , 1-7 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 17 | Even unpleasant reminders that you are an animal need not disgust you. | 3.5 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 18 | The English word <i>disgust</i> has no exact translation in Hindi or Malayalam | 2.4 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 19 | Impressive New Theory and Theorist | 2.2 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 20 | The (non)-effect of induced emotion on desire for different types of foods | 4.7 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 21 | On the emotions associated with violations of three moral codes (community, autonomy, divinity) | 1.9 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 22 | Mixed Emotions Viewed from the Psychological Constructionist Perspective | 2.9 | 91 | Citations (PDF) |
| 23 | Recognizing spontaneous facial expressions of emotion in a small-scale society of Papua New Guinea. | 3.5 | 91 | Citations (PDF) |
| 24 | Is it disgusting to be reminded that you are an animal? | 2.4 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 25 | Cross-Cultural Similarities and Differences in Affective Processing and Expression 2017, , 123-141 | | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 26 | The emotion seen in a face can be a methodological artifact: The process of elimination hypothesis. | 3.5 | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 27 | A Sceptical Look at Faces as Emotion Signals 2016, , 157-172 | | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 28 | Building emotion categories: Children use a process of elimination when they encounter novel expressions | 2.2 | 26 | Citations (PDF) |
| 29 | Reading emotions from faces in two indigenous societies. | 3.2 | 85 | Citations (PDF) |
| 30 | The word disgust may refer to more than one emotion. | 3.5 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 31 | The fear gasping face as a threat display in a Melanesian society | 7.5 | 84 | Citations (PDF) |
| 32 | Children’s Scales of Pleasure and Arousal | 1.3 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 33 | Differences in neural activity when processing emotional arousal and valence in autism spectrum disorders | 3.8 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 34 | A facial expression of pax: Assessing children’s “recognition” of emotion from faces | 2.2 | 39 | Citations (PDF) |
| 35 | Context is more powerful than we think: Contextual cues override facial cues even for valence. | 3.5 | 84 | Citations (PDF) |
| 36 | Children distinguish between positive pride and hubris. | 2.8 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 37 | On the limits of the relation of disgust to judgments of immorality | 2.5 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 38 | The development of emotion concepts: A story superiority effect in older children and adolescents | 2.2 | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 39 | Dynamic facial expressions allow differentiation of displays intended to convey positive and hubristic pride. | 3.5 | 26 | Citations (PDF) |
| 40 | Introducing the sick face | 1.9 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 41 | The relation between valence and arousal in subjective experience. | 13.8 | 453 | Citations (PDF) |
| 42 | Children's recognition of disgust in others. | 13.8 | 108 | Citations (PDF) |
| 43 | A story superiority effect for disgust, fear, embarrassment, and pride | 2.3 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 44 | The within-subjects design in the study of facial expressions | 2.4 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 45 | Universality Revisited | 2.9 | 226 | Citations (PDF) |
| 46 | Americans and Palestinians judge spontaneous facial expressions of emotion. | 3.5 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 47 | A 12-point circumplex structure of core affect. | 3.5 | 458 | Citations (PDF) |
| 48 | Differentiation in preschooler's categories of emotion. | 3.5 | 114 | Citations (PDF) |
| 49 | Neural systems subserving valence and arousal during the experience of induced emotions. | 3.5 | 243 | Citations (PDF) |
| 50 | The neurophysiological bases of emotion: An fMRI study of the affective circumplex using emotion‐denoting words | 3.8 | 202 | Citations (PDF) |
| 51 | Emotion, core affect, and psychological construction | 2.4 | 461 | Citations (PDF) |
| 52 | An affective circumplex model of neural systems subserving valence, arousal, and cognitive overlay during the appraisal of emotional faces | 1.8 | 162 | Citations (PDF) |
| 53 | Children acquire emotion categories gradually | 1.7 | 348 | Citations (PDF) |
| 54 | In defense of a psychological constructionist account of emotion: Reply to Zachar. | 0.5 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 55 | Judgments of emotion from spontaneous facial expressions of New Guineans. | 3.5 | 111 | Citations (PDF) |
| 56 | Language and the perception of emotion. | 3.5 | 335 | Citations (PDF) |
| 57 | Emotions Are Not Modules1 | 0.2 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 58 | The circumplex model of affect: An integrative approach to affective neuroscience, cognitive development, and psychopathology | 3.7 | 2,039 | Citations (PDF) |
| 59 | The relative power of an emotion’s facial expression, label, and behavioral consequence to evoke preschoolers’ knowledge of its cause | 1.7 | 83 | Citations (PDF) |
| 60 | Chinese affect circumplex: I. Structure of recalled momentary affect | 1.6 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 61 | Core affect and the psychological construction of emotion. | 5.0 | 4,878 | Citations (PDF) |
| 62 | Facial and Vocal Expressions of Emotion | 23.5 | 778 | Citations (PDF) |
| 63 | Words versus faces in evoking preschool children’s knowledge of the causes of emotions | 3.1 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 64 | Gender and Preschoolers' Perception of Emotion | 0.2 | 60 | Citations (PDF) |
| 65 | A Label Superiority Effect in Children's Categorization of Facial Expressions | 1.6 | 126 | Citations (PDF) |
| 66 | The Structure of Current Affect | 5.4 | 837 | Citations (PDF) |
| 67 | Structure of self-reported current affect: Integration and beyond. | 6.2 | 350 | Citations (PDF) |
| 68 | On the bipolarity of positive and negative affect. | 13.8 | 1,232 | Citations (PDF) |
| 69 | Core affect, prototypical emotional episodes, and other things called emotion: Dissecting the elephant. | 6.2 | 2,328 | Citations (PDF) |
| 70 | Facial expressions in Hollywood's protrayal of emotion. | 6.2 | 162 | Citations (PDF) |
| 71 | A neurobehavioral approach to the recognition of facial expressions in infancy 1997, , 176-204 | | 35 | Citations (PDF) |
| 72 | A Componential Approach to the meaning of facial expressions 1997, , 229-254 | | 118 | Citations (PDF) |
| 73 | Animal sounds and human faces: Do they have anything in common? 1997, , 133-157 | | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 74 | Yawns, laughs, smiles, tickles, and talking: Naturalistic and laboratory studies of facial action and social communication 1997, , 158-175 | | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 75 | Spontaneous facial behavior during intense emotional episodes: Artistic truth and optical truth 1997, , 255-274 | | 68 | Citations (PDF) |
| 76 | Facial expressions as modes of action readiness 1997, , 78-102 | | 129 | Citations (PDF) |
| 77 | What does a facial expression mean? 1997, , 3-30 | | 83 | Citations (PDF) |
| 78 | Reading emotions from and into faces: Resurrecting a dimensional-contextual perspective 1997, , 295-320 | | 179 | Citations (PDF) |
| 79 | Do facial expressions signal specific emotions? Judging emotion from the face in context. | 6.2 | 465 | Citations (PDF) |
| 80 | Facial expressions of emotion: What lies beyond minimal universality? | 13.8 | 239 | Citations (PDF) |
| 81 | Fuzzy concepts in a fuzzy hierarchy: Varieties of anger. | 6.2 | 207 | Citations (PDF) |
| 82 | Is there universal recognition of emotion from facial expression? A review of the cross-cultural studies. | 13.8 | 1,502 | Citations (PDF) |
| 83 | Culture and the categorization of emotions. | 13.8 | 1,150 | Citations (PDF) |
| 84 | The Preschooler's Understanding of the Causes and Consequences of Emotion | 4.0 | 43 | Citations (PDF) |
| 85 | The Preschooler's Understanding of the Causes and Consequences of Emotion | 4.0 | 58 | Citations (PDF) |
| 86 | On the dimensions preschoolers use to interpret facial expressions of emotion. | 2.8 | 145 | Citations (PDF) |
| 87 | Fuzzy Concepts and the Perception of Emotion in Facial Expressions | 0.7 | 117 | Citations (PDF) |
| 88 | Further Evidence on Preschoolers' Interpretation of Facial Expressions | 3.1 | 92 | Citations (PDF) |
| 89 | Preschool Children's Interpretation of Facial Expressions of Emotion | 3.1 | 110 | Citations (PDF) |
| 90 | Concept of emotion viewed from a prototype perspective. | 3.2 | 741 | Citations (PDF) |
| 91 | A circumplex model of affect. | 6.2 | 12,626 | Citations (PDF) |
| 92 | Evidence for a three-factor theory of emotions | 2.5 | 1,647 | Citations (PDF) |
| 93 | On the Invalidity of Neta and Kim's Argument That Surprise is Always Valenced | 2.9 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |