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Mashup Score: 6Hostile Attribution Bias Shapes Neural Synchrony in the Left Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex during Ambiguous Social Narratives - 5 day(s) ago
Join this interactive session as Yizhou Lyu, Zishan Su, and Yuan Chang Leong discuss their paper, “Hostile Attribution Bias Shapes Neural Synchrony in the Left Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex during Ambiguous Social Narratives”, with JNeurosci Reviewing Editor Daniela Schiller. Attendees can submit questions at registration and live during the webinar.
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
-
Mashup Score: 0
SfN’s home for learning and discussion Below is the significance statement of the paper published on November 14, 2023 in JNeurosci and authored by Keshov Sharma, Mark Diltz, Theodore Lincoln, Eric Albuquerque, and Lizabeth Romanski. Primates are unique in their ability to process and utilize complex, multisensory social information. The brain networks that support this are distributed across the temporal and frontal lobes. In this study, we characterize how social variables like identity and expression
Source: neuronline.sfn.orgCategories: General Medicine News, NeurologyTweet
Join the discussion with @LouisaLyu1, @Zishan__Su , @YuanChangLeong, and #JNeurosci Reviewing Editor Daniela Schiller on May 28 at 12PM EDT Register now for the #ResearchInConversation webinar: https://t.co/EQXr0cdCUD Catch up on the webinar topic ⬇️ https://t.co/4R1A8WipBM