All Relations between social stimuli and mentalising

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Elien Heleven, Tom Bylemans, Qianying Ma, Chris Baeken, Kris Baeten. Impaired sequence generation: a preliminary comparison between high functioning autistic and neurotypical adults. Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience. vol 16. 2022-09-23. PMID:36147543. earlier research demonstrated robust cerebellar involvement in sequencing, including high-level social information sequencing that requires mental state attributions, termed mentalizing. 2022-09-23 2023-08-14 human
Rebekah Wigton, Derek K Tracy, Tess M Verneuil, Michaela Johns, Thomas White, Panayiota G Michalopoulou, Bruno Averbeck, Sukhwinder Shergil. The importance of pro-social processing, and ameliorating dysfunction in schizophrenia. An FMRI study of oxytocin. Schizophrenia research. Cognition. vol 27. 2021-10-22. PMID:34660212. oxytocin attenuated the normal bias in selecting the happy face accompanied by reduced activation in a network of brain regions that support mentalising, processing of facial emotion, salience, aversion, uncertainty and ambiguity in social stimuli, including amygdala, temporo-parietal junction, posterior cingulate cortex, precuneus and insula. 2021-10-22 2023-08-13 human
Michael X Cohen, Nicole David, Kai Vogeley, Christian E Elge. Gamma-band activity in the human superior temporal sulcus during mentalizing from nonverbal social cues. Psychophysiology. vol 46. issue 1. 2009-03-20. PMID:18992070. gamma-band activity in the human superior temporal sulcus during mentalizing from nonverbal social cues. 2009-03-20 2023-08-12 human
Michael X Cohen, Nicole David, Kai Vogeley, Christian E Elge. Gamma-band activity in the human superior temporal sulcus during mentalizing from nonverbal social cues. Psychophysiology. vol 46. issue 1. 2009-03-20. PMID:18992070. the posterior superior temporal sulcus (psts) is a key structure for our ability to infer others' mental states based on social cues including facial expressions, body posture, and gestures ("mentalizing"), but the neural mechanisms of this ability remain largely unknown. 2009-03-20 2023-08-12 human