Not exact matches
But research
published in Social,
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience found that «when people viewed pictures of others being loved or cared for, their brains» threat response became muted,» writes Inc.com's Jill Krasny.
But there may be a way to push those feelings aside, according to new research
published in the journal Social,
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience.
An Ohio State University study
published in the scientific journal Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience found that acetaminophen, the painkilling ingredient in the Johnson & Johnson (johnson - johnson - 40) brand medicine, not only suppresses your own pain, but causes you to perceive other people's pain as being less severe.
In a study
published in the journal Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, researchers found that people were much better at processing information about people they had just met if they had large social groups.
In a research project
published in November 2014 in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, scientists at the University of Pittsburgh studied the reaction of normally developing adolescent females to a recording of criticism from their own mothers.
The study was led by Thomas Denson of the University of New South Wales in Australia in the journal
Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral
Neuroscience which is an official journal of the Psychonomic Society and is
published by Springer.
In a paper
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience in 2011, researchers at Yale described their discovery that people who touched a warm object were more likely to invest money with a stranger than people who touched something cold.
This classical account was elaborated on by a recent study from Michel Desmurget and his colleagues at the Center for
Cognitive Neuroscience in Bron, France, that was
published in the international journal Science.
«For over 10 years, language scientists and neuroscientists have been guided by a high impact study
published in Nature
Neuroscience showing that these predictions by the brain are very detailed and can even include the first sound of an upcoming word,» explains Mante Nieuwland,
cognitive neuroscientist at the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics (MPI) and the University of Edinburgh.
The findings, which could help people become more effective in the workplace and in school, are set to be
published Friday in the journal Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience.
Participants who received the real brain treatment expressed less bias against immigrants and also less belief in God, according to a study
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience.
A new article
published in the inaugural issue of the journal Biological Psychiatry:
Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging reports that individuals with intermittent explosive disorder (IED) have significantly lower gray matter volume in these frontolimbic brain structures.
The findings,
published in the journal Nature
Neuroscience, could help explain how some older adults with beta - amyloid deposits in their brain retain normal
cognitive function while others develop dementia.
In 2008 Moulton and his advisor, psychologist Stephen Kosslyn,
published the results in the Journal of
Cognitive Neuroscience.
In a study
published today in the Journal of Comparative Psychology, scientists at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History and the Department for General Psychology and
Cognitive Neuroscience (Institute of Psychology) at Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, investigated this question and found evidence that dogs create a «mental representation» of the target when they track a scent trail.
«It seems that smell is integrated at a very early stage,» says
cognitive psychologist Jonas Olofsson, who led the new study,
published November 5 in the Journal of
Neuroscience.
The findings regarding ASD were
published online last week in Social,
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience last week, a journal in which the findings regarding adults without ASD were also
published in 2015.
The study has just been
published in the scientific journal
Cognitive Neuroscience.
A SISSA research study
published in a special issue of the journal Brain and Cognition, completely dedicated to the
cognitive neuroscience of food, analyzes the lexical - semantic deficits of the food category in patients suffering from neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's.
The work, which was funded by the National Institutes of Health, was
published online in the Journal of
Cognitive Neuroscience.
Julio Martinez - Trujillo, an associate professor in the Department of Physiology and Pharmacology at Western's Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry and a Robarts Research Institute scientist, and his collaborators Roberto A. Gulli and Guillaume Doucet from the
Cognitive Neurophysiology Laboratory, recently
published an account of the new toolbox in Journal of
Neuroscience Methods.
The study,
published in the January issue of Biological Psychiatry:
Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, provides striking evidence of differences in the brains of impulsively aggressive individuals with intermittent explosive disorder (IED).
The article, «Neurally dissociable
cognitive components of reading deficits in subacute stroke» (doi: 10.3389 / fnhum.2015.00298) was
published in Frontiers in Human
Neuroscience.
The study,
published in Biological Psychiatry:
Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging, has the potential to radically reframe how researchers think about ADHD.
According to a recent study
published in the Journal of Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, researchers may have discovered a new truth about the mechanics behind self - perception.
A 2015 study
published in the journal
Neuroscience analyzed how high - sugar and high - fat diets affected the brains of mice, and found that both diets showed a significant
cognitive decline.
Another study
published in
Cognitive Neuroscience examined the brains of chronic dieters, and found that those with higher body fat percentages had a weaker connection between two areas in the brain: the part that manages executive control, and the reward region.
A 2009 study
published in the medical journal «Nutritional
Neuroscience» indicated that blackberry intake may have a positive impact on motor and
cognitive skills, which often decline with age.
But, the good news, a 2012 study
published in the journal Nutritional
Neuroscience showed the powerful effectiveness of polyphenols in combating psychiatric disorders and improving
cognitive performance.
The study,
published in the journal Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, performed brain scans on 124 adult male inmates.
London, UK About Blog BMC
Neuroscience is an open access journal publishing original peer - reviewed research articles in all aspects of the nervous system, including molecular, cellular, developmental and animal model studies, as well as cognitive and behavioral research, computational modeling and systems n
Neuroscience is an open access journal
publishing original peer - reviewed research articles in all aspects of the nervous system, including molecular, cellular, developmental and animal model studies, as well as
cognitive and behavioral research, computational modeling and systems
neuroscienceneuroscience.
A study
published in the February online journal of Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience shows that students raised in low - income homes have stronger fear reactions — with potential consequences for concentration.»
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In a study
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, 22 young adults had functional MRI scans of their brains to monitor activity when they were shown that electrical shocks were being sent to themselves, a friend, or stranger.
According to a study
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, your ability to find people you see as similar to yourself will help you form alliances.
In the first half of the study (soon to be
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience) the brain activity of fifteen canines was monitored by researchers.
Visions: Selections from the James T. Dyke Collection of Contemporary Drawings, exhibition catalog, Naples Museum of Art, Arkansas Art Center (2007) NYArts, «Ink Scissors Paper,» by Pamela A. Popeson (July 17, 2007) Journal of
Cognitive Neuroscience, Volume 19, No. 6, cover image (June, 2007) Iowa City Press - Citizen «Old Card Catalog Gets Art Makeover» by Rob Daniel (April 2, 2006) Virtual Comunidad 2005 / Now: Here: This, exhibition catalog
published by Artists Unite (December 2005) Manhattan Times, «The Photography of Fleeting Moments,» by Mike Fitelson (February 2005) BLIR, Issue # 05 (September 2005) J.T. Kirkland's Thinking About Art, «Artists Interview Artists», interview by Douglas Witmer (August 17, 2005) NY Arts, «Illuminated Brush Strokes,» by Pamela A. Popeson (March / April 2004) NY Arts, «Sky Pape at June Kelly Gallery,» by Carl E. Hazlewood (November 2001) Artnet.com Magazine, Drawing Notebook, by N.F. Karlins (October, 2001) Cover, «Processing Natural Order, Sky Pape at June Kelly Gallery,» by Chloe Veltman (September, 1999) Review Magazine, «Sky Pape, Inklings: Drawings at June Kelly Gallery,» by Mark Daniel Cohen, pp 8 - 10 (June, 1999) Journal of
Cognitive Neuroscience, Volume 11, No. 4, cover image (1999) ARTnews Vol.97, No. 1 «Peer Reviews: The Best of 1997» by Paul Gardner, pp 89 - 95 (1998) The Café Review, Spring issue.
London, UK About Blog BMC
Neuroscience is an open access journal publishing original peer - reviewed research articles in all aspects of the nervous system, including molecular, cellular, developmental and animal model studies, as well as cognitive and behavioral research, computational modeling and systems n
Neuroscience is an open access journal
publishing original peer - reviewed research articles in all aspects of the nervous system, including molecular, cellular, developmental and animal model studies, as well as
cognitive and behavioral research, computational modeling and systems
neuroscienceneuroscience.
According to a new study
published in Social
Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, a form of meditation known as cognitive - based compassion training (CBCT) could be your ticket to being able to read other
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience, a form of meditation known as
cognitive - based compassion training (CBCT) could be your ticket to being able to read other
cognitive - based compassion training (CBCT) could be your ticket to being able to read others better.
The study was first
published online June 17 in the journal Social
Cognitive and Affective
Neuroscience.