Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7320644 | Neuropsychologia | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The identification of limbic structures as a shared correlate and the patterns of activation observed for each condition may reflect the aberrant patterns of facial emotion processing that the two conditions share, and may contribute to explaining part of the underlying neural substrate of exaggerated/diminished fear responses to social cues that characterize SAD and WS respectively. We believe that insights from WS and the inclusion of this syndrome as a control group in future experimental studies may improve our understanding of the neural correlates of social fear in general, and of SAD in particular.
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Authors
C. Binelli, S. Subirà , A. Batalla, A. Muñiz, G. Sugranyés, J.A. Crippa, M. Farré, L. Pérez-Jurado, R. MartÃn-Santos,