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005     20190625110743.0
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|a pmid:21725038
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|a pmc:PMC3450920
024 7 _ |2 DOI
|a 10.1093/cercor/bhr166
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|a WOS:000302004600020
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041 _ _ |a eng
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100 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)136848
|a Bzdok, D.
|b 0
|u FZJ
245 _ _ |a The Modular Neuroarchitecture of Social Judgments on Faces
260 _ _ |a Oxford
|b Oxford Univ. Press
|c 2012
300 _ _ |a 951-961
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|a Journal Article
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|a ARTICLE
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|a article
440 _ 0 |0 1171
|a Cerebral Cortex
|x 1047-3211
500 _ _ |3 POF3_Assignment on 2016-02-29
500 _ _ |a Record converted from VDB: 12.11.2012
520 _ _ |a Face-derived information on trustworthiness and attractiveness crucially influences social interaction. It is, however, unclear to what degree the functional neuroanatomy of these complex social judgments on faces reflects genuine social versus basic emotional and cognitive processing. To disentangle social from nonsocial contributions, we assessed commonalities and differences between the functional networks activated by judging social (trustworthiness, attractiveness), emotional (happiness), and cognitive (age) facial traits. Relative to happiness and age evaluations, both trustworthiness and attractiveness judgments selectively activated the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex and inferior frontal gyrus, forming a core social cognition network. Moreover, they also elicited a higher amygdalar response than even the emotional control condition. Both social judgments differed, however, in their top-down modulation of face-sensitive regions: trustworthiness judgments recruited the posterior superior temporal sulcus, whereas attractiveness judgments recruited the fusiform gyrus. Social and emotional judgments converged and, therefore, likely interact in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Social and age judgments, on the other hand, commonly engaged the anterior insula, inferior parietal cortex, and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, which appear to subserve more cognitive aspects in social evaluation. These findings demonstrate the modularity of social judgments on human faces by separating the neural correlates of social, face-specific, emotional, and cognitive processing facets.
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|2 G:(DE-HGF)
|a Funktion und Dysfunktion des Nervensystems
|c P33
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588 _ _ |a Dataset connected to Pubmed
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Adult
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Analysis of Variance
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Brain: blood supply
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Brain: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Brain Mapping
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Cognition: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Emotions: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Face
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Female
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Humans
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Judgment: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Likelihood Functions
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Magnetic Resonance Imaging
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Male
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Middle Aged
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Oxygen: blood
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Pattern Recognition, Visual: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Photic Stimulation
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Reaction Time: physiology
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Social Perception
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Statistics as Topic
650 _ 2 |2 MeSH
|a Young Adult
650 _ 7 |0 7782-44-7
|2 NLM Chemicals
|a Oxygen
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)131693
|a Langner, R.
|b 1
|u FZJ
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)131684
|a Hoffstaedter, F.
|b 2
|u FZJ
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-HGF)0
|a Turetsky, B.I.
|b 3
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)131714
|a Zilles, K.
|b 4
|u FZJ
700 1 _ |0 P:(DE-Juel1)131678
|a Eickhoff, S.B.
|b 5
|u FZJ
773 _ _ |0 PERI:(DE-600)1483485-6
|a 10.1093/cercor/bhr166
|n 4
|p 951-961
|t Cerebral cortex
|v 22
|x 1047-3211
|y 2012
856 7 _ |2 Pubmed Central
|u http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3450920
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914 1 _ |y 2012
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