All Relations between mentalising and cerebellum

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Frank Van Overwalle, Sarah De Coninck, Elien Heleven, Gaetano Perrotta, Nordeyn Oulad Ben Taib, Mario Manto, Peter Marië. The role of the cerebellum in reconstructing social action sequences: a pilot study. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. vol 14. issue 5. 2020-01-10. PMID:31037308. to investigate the role of action sequencing in mentalizing, we tested patients with generalized cerebellar degenerative lesions on tests of social understanding and compared their performance with matched healthy volunteers. 2020-01-10 2023-08-13 human
Elien Heleven, Frank Van Overwall. The neural basis of representing others' inner states. Current opinion in psychology. vol 23. 2019-07-08. PMID:29501981. furthermore, the recently discovered role of the cerebellum in social mentalizing is introduced, and its potential role in inferring action sequences. 2019-07-08 2023-08-13 Not clear
Maria Leggio, Giusy Olivit. Topography of the cerebellum in relation to social brain regions and emotions. Handbook of clinical neurology. vol 154. 2018-09-28. PMID:29903453. overcoming the traditional segregation of cerebrocerebellar networks in sensorimotor/cognitive functional modules, during emotional/social processes, the cerebellar activity reflects a domain-specific mentalizing functionality that is strongly connected with corresponding mentalizing networks in the cerebrum. 2018-09-28 2023-08-13 Not clear
Penelope A Lewis, Amy Birch, Alexander Hall, Robin I M Dunba. Higher order intentionality tasks are cognitively more demanding. Social cognitive and affective neuroscience. vol 12. issue 7. 2018-05-03. PMID:28338962. here, we use a task in which participants read stories and then answered questions about the stories in a behavioural experiment (39 participants) and an fmri experiment (17 participants) to show that mentalising requires more time for responses than factual memory of a matched complexity and also that higher orders of mentalising are disproportionately more demanding and require the recruitment of more neurons in brain regions known to be associated with theory of mind, including insula, posterior sts, temporal pole and cerebellum. 2018-05-03 2023-08-13 human
Frank Van Overwalle, Elien Heleven, Ning Ma, Peter Marië. Tell me twice: A multi-study analysis of the functional connectivity between the cerebrum and cerebellum after repeated trait information. NeuroImage. vol 144. issue Pt A. 2018-02-09. PMID:27566262. the results suggest that trait repetition recruits activity in areas belonging to the mentalizing and executive control networks in the cerebrum, and the executive control areas in the cerebellum. 2018-02-09 2023-08-13 human
Frank Van Overwalle, Elien Heleven, Ning Ma, Peter Marië. Tell me twice: A multi-study analysis of the functional connectivity between the cerebrum and cerebellum after repeated trait information. NeuroImage. vol 144. issue Pt A. 2018-02-09. PMID:27566262. importantly, significant patterns of functional connectivity were found linking these cerebellar executive areas with cerebral executive areas in the medial pmfc, the left pfc and the left ipc, and mentalizing areas in the left mtc. 2018-02-09 2023-08-13 human
Michael V Lombardo, Bonnie Auyeung, Rosemary J Holt, Jack Waldman, Amber N V Ruigrok, Natasha Mooney, Edward T Bullmore, Simon Baron-Cohen, Prantik Kund. Improving effect size estimation and statistical power with multi-echo fMRI and its impact on understanding the neural systems supporting mentalizing. NeuroImage. vol 142. 2018-02-02. PMID:27417345. without smoothing, group-level effect size estimates on two different mentalizing tasks were enhanced by me-ica at a median rate of 24% in regions canonically associated with mentalizing, while much more substantial boosts (40-149%) were observed in non-canonical cerebellar areas. 2018-02-02 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Tine D'aes, Peter Marië. Social cognition and the cerebellum: A meta-analytic connectivity analysis. Human brain mapping. vol 36. issue 12. 2016-10-11. PMID:26419890. in a recent meta-analysis, van overwalle, baetens, mariën, and vandekerckhove (2014) documented that the cerebellum is implicated in social processes of "body" reading (mirroring; e.g., understanding other persons' intentions from observing their movements) and "mind" reading (mentalizing, e.g., inferring other persons' beliefs, intentions or personality traits, reconstructing persons' past, future, or hypothetical events). 2016-10-11 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Tine D'aes, Peter Marië. Social cognition and the cerebellum: A meta-analytic connectivity analysis. Human brain mapping. vol 36. issue 12. 2016-10-11. PMID:26419890. the consistent and strong connectivity findings of this analysis suggest that cerebellar activity during social judgments reflects distinct mirroring and mentalizing functionality, and that these cerebellar functions are connected with corresponding functional networks in the cerebrum. 2016-10-11 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Peter Marië. Functional connectivity between the cerebrum and cerebellum in social cognition: A multi-study analysis. NeuroImage. vol 124. issue Pt A. 2016-08-31. PMID:26348560. this multi-study connectivity analysis explores the functional connectivity of the cerebellum with the cerebrum in social mentalizing, that is, understanding the mind of another person. 2016-08-31 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Peter Marië. Functional connectivity between the cerebrum and cerebellum in social cognition: A multi-study analysis. NeuroImage. vol 124. issue Pt A. 2016-08-31. PMID:26348560. the results suggest that cerebellar activity during these social processes reflects a domain-specific mentalizing functionality that is strongly connected with a corresponding mentalizing network in the cerebrum. 2016-08-31 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Kris Baetens, Peter Mariën, Marie Vandekerckhov. Cerebellar areas dedicated to social cognition? A comparison of meta-analytic and connectivity results. Social neuroscience. vol 10. issue 4. 2016-01-22. PMID:25621820. a recent meta-analysis explored the role of the cerebellum in social cognition and documented that this part of the brain is critically implicated in social cognition, especially in more abstract and complex forms of mentalizing. 2016-01-22 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Kris Baetens, Peter Mariën, Marie Vandekerckhov. Cerebellar areas dedicated to social cognition? A comparison of meta-analytic and connectivity results. Social neuroscience. vol 10. issue 4. 2016-01-22. PMID:25621820. given the substantial overlap, a novel interpretation of the meta-analytic findings is put forward suggesting that cerebellar activity during social judgments might reflect a more domain-specific mentalizing functionality in some areas of the cerebellum than assumed before. 2016-01-22 2023-08-13 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Kris Baetens, Peter Mariën, Marie Vandekerckhov. Social cognition and the cerebellum: a meta-analysis of over 350 fMRI studies. NeuroImage. vol 86. 2014-09-03. PMID:24076206. in this study, novel meta-analyses of over 350 fmri studies, dividing up the domain of social cognition in homogeneous subdomains, confirmed this low involvement of the cerebellum in conditions that trigger the mirror network (e.g., when familiar movements of body parts are observed) and the mentalizing network (when no moving body parts or unfamiliar movements are present). 2014-09-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Kris Baetens, Peter Mariën, Marie Vandekerckhov. Social cognition and the cerebellum: a meta-analysis of over 350 fMRI studies. NeuroImage. vol 86. 2014-09-03. PMID:24076206. there is, however, one set of mentalizing conditions that strongly involve the cerebellum in 50-100% of the individual studies. 2014-09-03 2023-08-12 Not clear
Frank Van Overwalle, Kris Baetens, Peter Mariën, Marie Vandekerckhov. Social cognition and the cerebellum: a meta-analysis of over 350 fMRI studies. NeuroImage. vol 86. 2014-09-03. PMID:24076206. we discuss the role of the cerebellum in social cognition in general and in higher abstraction mentalizing in particular. 2014-09-03 2023-08-12 Not clear