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Description: The study was designed to investigate the impact of the task on the neural processing of direct and averted gaze faces. For full study details please refer to "Perceived gaze direction differentially affects discrimination of facial emotion, attention and gender – an ERP study" by Sarah D. McCrackin and Roxane J. Itier in Frontiers in Psychology (2019). The study entailed using the same angry and happy direct and averted gaze faces to complete three tasks (emotion discrimination, gender discrimination and attention discrimination). The design was within-subjects, such that 29 participants completed all tasks. Accuracy and Response Time Data, as well as GND files for FMUT (the Factorial Mass Univariate Toolbox) as provided.

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Study Overview and Associated Publication The study was designed to investigate the impact of the task on the neural processing of direct and averted gaze faces. For full study details please refer to "Perceived gaze direction differentially affects discrimination of facial emotion, attention and gender – an ERP study" by Sarah D. McCrackin and Roxane J. Itier in Frontiers in Psychology (2019).

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attention discriminationaverted gazedirect gazeEEGelectroencephalogramemotion discriminationEvent Related Potentialface perceptionface processingFMUTgaze directiongender discriminationMass Univariate Approachtask effectswithin-subjects design

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