“…Using a perceptual-matching task, researchers have shown that participants make faster and less errant responses to stimuli related to the self than other persons. Critically, this effect has been replicated on numerous occasions, with self-prioritization extending to a wide range of stimuli, including: geometric shapes (Desebrock, Sui, & Spence, 2018;Enock, Sui, Hewstone, & Humphreys, 2018;Golubickis et al, 2017;Schäfer, Frings, & Wentura, 2016;Schäfer, Wentura, & Frings, 2017;Schäfer, Wesslein, Spence, Wenura, & Frings, 2016;Sui et al, 2012Sui et al, , 2013Sui et al, , 2014, badges of sports teams (Moradi, Sui, Hewstone, & Humphreys, 2015), objects (Schäfer, Wentura, & Frings, 2015), computer-generated avatars (Mattan, Quinn, Apperly, Sui, & Rothshtein, 2015), Gabor patches (Macrae, Visokomogilski, Golubickis, & Sahraie, 2018;Stein et al, 2016), lines (Siebold et al, 2015), and faces (Payne, Tsakiris, & Maister, 2017). In addition, self-prioritization has been reported across various sensory modalities (Frings & Wentura, 2014;Schäfer et al, 2015Schäfer et al, , 2016b.…”