Abstract

Agustin Ibanez is supported by CONICET, CONICYT/FONDECYT Regular (1130920 and 1140114), FONCyT-PICT 2012-0412/2012-1309, and INECO Foundation. Maria Ruz is supported by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, “Ramon y Cajal” fellowship (RYC-2008-03008) and grant PSI2013-45567-P. Jorge Moll is supported by intramural grants, D'Or Institute for Research and Education, and FAPERJ (Rio de Janeiro State Foundation for Research). Sonja A. Kotz is supported by Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR: 62867) and German Science Foundation (KO-2268/6-1).

Highlights

  • This Research Topic features several papers tapping the situated nature of emotion and social cognition processes

  • The results suggest that distinct neural loci process the physical and psychological aspects of facial emotion perception in a region-specific and implicit manner

  • The results demonstrate that description-based reappraisal significantly modulated the emotional experience and event-related potentials (ERPs) responses to erotic as well as neutral images

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Summary

Introduction

This Research Topic features several papers tapping the situated nature of emotion and social cognition processes. We present studies examining how cognitive and neural functions are influenced by basic affective processes (interoception, motivation and reward, emotional impulsiveness, and appraisal of violent stimuli). The studies in our third selection deal with different influences in social cognition (SC) domains (human and non-human comparative studies, long-term effects of social and physical stress, developmental theory of mind, neural bases of passionate love for others, social decision making in normal and psychopathic participants, and frontal lobe contributions to psychosocial adaptation models).

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