328 research outputs found
CHILD MALTREATMENT, ABUSE, AND NEGLECT: AN UMBRELLA REVIEW OF THEIR PREVALENCE AND DEFINITIONS
Decreased brain network global efficiency after attachment memories retrieval in individuals with unresolved/disorganized attachment-related state of mind
Doll Therapy Intervention Reduces Challenging Behaviours of Women with Dementia Living in Nursing Homes: Results from a Randomized Single-Blind Controlled Trial
ASSESSMENT OF UNRESOLVED/DISORGANIZED STATE OF MIND IN RELATION TO ATTACHMENT: A ROC CURVE STUDY USING THE ADULT ATTACHMENT INTERVIEW AND THE MEASURE OF PARENTAL STYLE
Intentional Minds: A Philosophical Analysis of Intention Tested through fMRI Experiments Involving People with Schizophrenia, People with Autism, and Healthy Individuals
In this paper we show how we empirically tested one of the most relevant topics in philosophy of mind through a series of fMRI experiments: the classification of different types of intention. To this aim, firstly we trace a theoretical distinction among private, prospective, and communicative intentions. Second, we propose a set of predictions concerning the recognition of these three types of intention in healthy individuals, and we report the experimental results corroborating our theoretical model of intention. Third, we derive from our model predictions relevant for the domain of psychopathological functioning. In particular, we treat the cases of both hyper-intentionality (as in paranoid schizophrenia) and hypo-intentionality (as in autistic spectrum disorders). Our conclusion is that the theoretical model of intention we propose contributes to enlarge our knowledge on the neurobiological bases of intention processing, in both healthy people and in people with impairments to the neurocognitive system that underlies intention recognition
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The Role of Theory of the Mind and Deontic Reasoning in the Evolution of Deception
Modern Darwinist perspective enables to deal with the study of several human phenomena, one of which is deception, that we define as a behaviour unfolded with the deliberate intention of producing or sustaining a state of ignorance or false belief in another person. volutionary Psychology, an emerging area inside Cognitive Science, represents a promising conceptual approach to the study of deception. According to it, knowledge on human mind can be improved by understanding the processes which, during evolution, shaped its rchitecture. This work traces back to the Evolutionary Psychology arguments (for a review see Cosmides & Tooby, 1987; Barkow, Cosmides & Tooby, 1992; Buss, 1995; 1999) and develops the hypothesis that deception is a behaviour underpinned by two psychological echanisms that evolved in response to problems posed by group living: the theory of mind and deontic reasoning
Theory of Mind, pragmatics and the brain. Converging evidence for the role of intention processing as a core feature of human communication
Altered connectivity between the central executive network and the salience network in delusion-prone individuals: A resting state eLORETA report
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