The phrase
"neural underpinnings" refers to the basic or fundamental processes happening in our brain that give rise to our thoughts, behaviors, and experiences. It's about understanding how our brain's structure and functions support and influence our cognitive abilities and emotions.
Full definition
«Aversion to holes driven by disgust, not fear, study finds: Psychologists reveal
neural underpinnings of trypophobia.»
She agrees with Burkart and her co-workers that cooperative breeding «goes a long way towards explaining why only the apes in the line leading to Homo developed the
necessary neural underpinnings» for highly cooperative behavior.
In the present study, we explored the psychological and
neural underpinnings of attachment - induced safety by examining whether viewing an attachment figure during a threatening experience — receiving physical pain — led to increased activity in a neural region associated with safety signaling and a corresponding reduction in the threatening or distressing experience of physical pain.
«Our results also suggest that understanding
the neural underpinnings of complex motor tasks such as learning a new dance can be an effective model to study motor learning in the real world.»
«We encourage future, larger - scale investigations into
the neural underpinnings of alcohol - related aggression with stronger doses and clinical samples.
If validated, acetaminophen may become an invaluable research tool in seeking
the neural underpinnings of not only exclusion but other mental processes related to social behavior.
Future work will, I hope, shed light on
the neural underpinnings of these disorders and allow us to better understand why humans are such social animals.
For cognitive neuroscientist Atsushi Sekiguchi, who was studying
the neural underpinnings of stress at Tohoku University in Sendai, the earthquake was a rare opportunity to tease apart cause and effect.
Since love shares some of
the neural underpinnings with addiction, you will need to replace your fix of oxytocin or dopamine.
Little is known about
the neural underpinnings of metacognition, but it is likely to involve the prefrontal cortex and the hippocampus, two brain areas modulated by the chemicals dopamine and noradrenaline.
As a feminist, she had long been interested in questions of sex and gender, but as a scientist, her research had been mostly on
the neural underpinnings of obsessive - compulsive behavior.
Scientists are also using surgery patients to investigate
the neural underpinnings of language.
The research implies that
the neural underpinnings of the so - called maternal instinct aren't unique to women, or activated solely by hormones, but can be developed by anyone who chooses to be a parent.
Brain organoids, also known as mini-brains, are tiny clumps of brain cells grown from stem cells that researchers are using to investigate
the neural underpinnings of autism and other neurological disorders.
In this study, we were interested in the effects of accidental rewards, both positive and negative, on the implementation of action inhibition and
their neural underpinnings.
January 19, 2016 UChicago neuroscientist David Freedman receives 2016 Troland Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences David Freedman, PhD, a neuroscientist who studies
the neural underpinnings of learning, memory and decision - making, has been awarded the 2016 Troland Research Award from the National Academy of Sciences.
His research seeks to understand
the neural underpinnings of visual awareness and attention, and the neural consequences of cerebral blood flow in the healthy brain and in neurological disorders.
She plans to pursue a Ph.D. in neuroscience or psychology, studying
the neural underpinnings of biases, beliefs, and information literacy.
She has pushed me to think about the specific circumstances in which having an understanding of
the neural underpinnings of behavior are practically useful and not just academically noteworthy.
The paucity of patients with Cotard's syndrome means that
the neural underpinnings of their delusions are yet to be fully understood, but it's clear that Cotard's syndrome is giving us a glimpse into the nature of the self.
The goal of this paper is to address the underlying cognitive processes and
their neural underpinnings that constitute empathy within a developmental neuroscience perspective.