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Neural mechanisms underlying reward processing and social cognition: A replication study with a Japanese sample. [PDF]
Ohnishi K, Sugawara M, Mano Y, Suzuki S.
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Social cognition training improves recognition of individual emotions in schizophrenia disorder. [PDF]
Patel SES +8 more
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Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2021
Social spatial cognition refers to the interaction between self, place, and partners, with emphasis on the impact of the social environment on spatial behavior and on how individual spatial representations converge to form collective spatial behavior - i.e., common places and routes.
Alex Dorfman +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Social spatial cognition refers to the interaction between self, place, and partners, with emphasis on the impact of the social environment on spatial behavior and on how individual spatial representations converge to form collective spatial behavior - i.e., common places and routes.
Alex Dorfman +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
Animal Behaviour, 2015
Social cognition is a major problem underlying deficiencies in interpersonal relationships in several psychiatric populations. And yet there is currently no gold standard for pharmacological treatment of psychiatric illness that directly targets these social cognitive areas.
Alexandra, Patin, René, Hurlemann
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Social cognition is a major problem underlying deficiencies in interpersonal relationships in several psychiatric populations. And yet there is currently no gold standard for pharmacological treatment of psychiatric illness that directly targets these social cognitive areas.
Alexandra, Patin, René, Hurlemann
openaire +3 more sources
Beyond cognitive deficits: how social class shapes social cognition
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2023Lower social class is thought to contribute to poorer executive functioning and working memory. Nevertheless, lower social class individuals consistently outperform their higher-class counterparts on social cognitive tasks that rely on similar underlying cognitive processes (e.g., working memory and executive functioning).
Nicholas J. Fendinger +2 more
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