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  The neurocognitive development of social emotions and emotional egocentricity

Steinbeis, N. (2014). The neurocognitive development of social emotions and emotional egocentricity. Talk presented at Department of Psychology. University of Vienna, Austria. 2014-05-01 - 2014-05-01.

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Steinbeis, Nikolaus1, Author           
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1Department Social Neuroscience, MPI for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Max Planck Society, ou_634552              

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 Abstract: In this talk I will present findings from two strands of developmental research. The first part will explore the development of overcoming egocentric tendencies when making judgments of others’ emotional states. I will present a series of newly developed paradigms suited to studying various types of emotional egocentricity in children, adults as well as patient populations. These studies suggest a unique role of right supramarginal gyrus in overcoming emotional egocentricity, given its pronounced connectivity with a network of regions involved in empathic judgments. The second part will focus on the development of social emotions such as envy and Schadenfreude. I will show that this depends critically on the development of more general emotion regulation abilities and provide tentative evidence for some evolutionary continuity of social emotions through comparative studies. I will close with a discussion of the role of domain-general processes in the development of social behavior.

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 Dates: 2014-05
 Publication Status: Not specified
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Title: Department of Psychology
Place of Event: University of Vienna, Austria
Start-/End Date: 2014-05-01 - 2014-05-01

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