Abstract

Adding complexity to emotion-cognition interactions: the stressed individual

Highlights

  • Adding complexity to emotion-cognition interactions: the stressed individual

  • Emotion and cognition were not long ago considered as independent brain functions with respective underlying neural systems working in parallel and only occasionally interacting

  • This earlier perspective considered that the main focus of Behavioral Neuroscience was to understand the neurobiological basis of cognition, which was considered as a “cold” mode of brain functioning.“Hot” emotional systems were regarded as inferior and not central for the eventual understanding of how the human brain works

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Summary

Introduction

Adding complexity to emotion-cognition interactions: the stressed individual A commentary on Emotion and cognition in high and low stress-sensitive mouse strains: a combined neuroendocrine a behavioral study in BALB/c and C57BL/6J mice by Vera Brinks, Maaike van der Mark, Ronald de Kloet and Melly Oitzl

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