Now showing items 1-10 of 10

    • The Cognitive Consequences of Emotion Regulation: An ERP Investigation 

      Deveney, Christen M.; Pizzagalli, Diego (Blackwell Publishers, 2008)
      Increasing evidence suggests that emotion regulation (ER) strategies modulate encoding of information presented during regulation; however, no studies have assessed the impact of cognitive reappraisal ER strategies on the ...
    • Culture, Cognition, and Collaborative Networks in Organizations 

      Srivastava, Sameer; Banaji, Mahzarin R. (SAGE Publications, 2011)
      This article examines the interplay of culture, cognition, and social networks in organizations with norms that emphasize cross-boundary collaboration. In such settings, social desirability concerns can induce a disparity ...
    • Functional Connectivity in Multiple Cortical Networks Is Associated with Performance Across Cognitive Domains in Older Adults 

      Shaw, Emily E.; Schultz, Aaron P.; Sperling, Reisa A.; Hedden, Trey (Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., 2015)
      Abstract Intrinsic functional connectivity MRI has become a widely used tool for measuring integrity in large-scale cortical networks. This study examined multiple cortical networks using Template-Based Rotation (TBR), a ...
    • How Has Bourdieu Been Good to Think With? The Case of the United States 

      Lamont, Michele (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012)
      The essay discusses the impact of Bourdieu on modern U.S. sociology. Specifically, I offer five observations about the reception and adoption of Bourdieu by U.S. sociologists from the perspective of someone who was involved ...
    • Human Adaptation to the Control of Fire 

      Wrangham, Richard W.; Carmody, Rachel Naomi (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010)
      Charles Darwin attributed human evolutionary success to three traits. Our social habits and anatomy were important, he said, but the critical feature was our intelligence, because it led to so much else, including such ...
    • Memory: sins and virtues 

      Schacter, Daniel L. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2013)
      Memory plays an important role in everyday life but does not provide an exact and unchanging record of experience: research has documented that memory is a constructive process that is subject to a variety of errors and ...
    • The Neuroscience of Intergroup Relations 

      Cikara, Mina; Van Bavel, Jay J. (SAGE Publications, 2014)
      We review emerging research on the psychological and biological factors that underlie social group formation, cooperation, and conflict in humans. Our aim is to integrate the intergroup neuroscience literature with classic ...
    • Reward Learning, Neurocognition, Social Cognition, and Symptomatology in Psychosis 

      Lewandowski, Kathryn E.; Whitton, Alexis E.; Pizzagalli, Diego A.; Norris, Lesley A.; Ongur, Dost; Hall, Mei-Hua (Frontiers Media S.A., 2016)
      Background: Patients with psychosis spectrum disorders exhibit deficits in social and neurocognition, as well as hallmark abnormalities in motivation and reward processing. Aspects of reward processing may overlap behaviorally ...
    • Segregated Fronto-Cerebellar Circuits Revealed by Intrinsic Functional Connectivity 

      Krienen, Fenna Marie; Buckner, Randy Lee (Oxford University Press, 2009)
      Multiple, segregated fronto-cerebellar circuits have been characterized in nonhuman primates using transneuronal tracing techniques including those that target prefrontal areas. Here, we used functional connectivity MRI ...
    • Splendor in the Grass? A Pilot Study Assessing the Impact of Medical Marijuana on Executive Function 

      Gruber, Staci A.; Sagar, Kelly A.; Dahlgren, Mary K.; Racine, Megan T.; Smith, Rosemary T.; Lukas, Scott E. (Frontiers Media S.A., 2016)
      Currently, 25 states and Washington DC have enacted full medical marijuana (MMJ) programs while 18 states allow limited access to MMJ products. Limited access states permit low (or zero) tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and high ...