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Social cognition concerns the various psychological processes that enable individuals to take advantage of being part of a social group. Of major importance to social cognition are the various social signals that enable us to learn about the world.
C. Frith
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Social cognition in schizophrenia [PDF]
Social cognition describes the mental processes by which individuals perceive, process, and utilize information in social interactions.1 It is a topic that has attracted significant interest, as it can account for differences in daily functioning and ...
N. Torosyan, R. Bota
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Harmonizing cross-cultural and transdiagnostic assessment of social cognition by expert panel consensus [PDF]
Social cognition, the perception and processing of social information, is adversely affected in multiple psychiatric, neurological, and neurodevelopmental disorders, and these impairments negatively impact quality of life for individuals across the globe.
Amy E. Pinkham+3 more
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Social cognition in schizophrenia [PDF]
Patients with schizophrenia display alterations in social cognition, as well as in the realm of neurocognition. It is still unclear to what extent these two cognitive domains represent two separate dimensions or different expressions of a unified ...
Marinković Dragan+4 more
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Gender Disparities in Middle Authorship
Women increasingly occupy jobs in psychological research, but continue to face career barriers. One such barrier is fewer authorship and publication opportunities, with women often having fewer first authorships than men. In this research, we examine the
Alexandra Fleischmann, Laura Van Berkel
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Artificial agents are on their way to interact with us daily. Thus, the design of embodied artificial agents that can easily cooperate with humans is crucial for their deployment in social scenarios.
Davide Ghiglino+4 more
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One of the key questions in human–robot interaction research is whether humans perceive robots as intentional agents, or rather only as mindless machines. Research has shown that, in some contexts, people do perceive robots as intentional agents. However,
Roselli Cecilia+3 more
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Cultural differences in joint attention and engagement in mutual gaze with a robot face
Joint attention is a pivotal mechanism underlying human ability to interact with one another. The fundamental nature of joint attention in the context of social cognition has led researchers to develop tasks that address this mechanism and operationalize
Serena Marchesi+4 more
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In two pre-registered and fully incentivized studies (N = 501), we investigate prosocial behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany. Based on a comparison with pre-pandemic data, Study 1 shows that individuals’ general prosociality measured with a (
Dshamilja Marie Hellmann+2 more
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Cognitive load affects early processes involved in mentalizing robot behaviour
How individuals interpret robots’ actions is a timely question in the context of the general approach to increase robot’s presence in human social environment in the decades to come. Facing robots, people might have a tendency to explain their actions in
Nicolas Spatola+2 more
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