Guilt and shame arise from different cognitive triggers and rely on distinct neural systems to guide compensatory behavior.
Rutgers researchers found that the distribution of neural timescales across the cortex plays a crucial role in how ...
PsyPost on MSN
Competitive athletes exhibit lower off-field aggression and enhanced brain connectivity
A recent study published in Psychology of Sport & Exercise has found that long-term engagement in competitive athletics is ...
What if we could peer into the brain and watch how it organizes information as we act, perceive, or make decisions? A new ...
Findings reveal how harm and responsibility shape feelings of guilt and shame in different ways, which in turn drive behaviours in response to these emotions.
New brain research reveals how guilt and shame shape moral behavior, showing why guilt promotes repair while shame often ...
What if we could peer into the brain and watch how it organizes information as we act, perceive, or make decisions? A new ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists pinpoint neural roots of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
For decades, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder have been diagnosed from the outside in, through behavior, mood, and memory ...
Our understanding of schizophrenia has increased greatly in recent years, as studies of large groups of people have identified a multitude of genetic variants that increase a person's risk of the ...
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