Theory of Mind, Emotion, and the Brain: Brain Regions Involved in Intention-based Emotion Attribution - Katrin Döhnel - Books - Suedwestdeutscher Verlag fuer Hochschuls - 9783838125152 - March 28, 2011
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Theory of Mind, Emotion, and the Brain: Brain Regions Involved in Intention-based Emotion Attribution

Katrin Döhnel

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Theory of Mind, Emotion, and the Brain: Brain Regions Involved in Intention-based Emotion Attribution

Theory of Mind (ToM) defines the ability to understand other peoples' behaviour and emotions by understanding their mental states such as beliefs or intentions. In ToM research there is an interesting developmental course: When someone's intention is fulfilled, 2- to 3-year-olds attribute good emotions to the other, and they attribute bad emotions when his or her intention is not fulfilled. This process is defined as intention-based emotion attribution. Things get complicated in the case of fulfilled immoral intentions. While 4- to 5-year-olds ignore the immoral aspect by solely attributing ?happy victimizer? emotions to the other, 6- to 7-year-olds attribute mixed emotions: A fulfilled intention makes someone feel good; but the moral rule violation also causes bad feelings. By using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in adults this work investigated neural networks of intention-based emotion attribution, and revealed common neural activity associated with non-immoral (neutral) and immoral intentions. This indicates that the development of neutral and immoral intention understanding might be associated with the maturation of common rather than distinct brain regions.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released March 28, 2011
ISBN13 9783838125152
Publishers Suedwestdeutscher Verlag fuer Hochschuls
Pages 120
Dimensions 226 × 7 × 150 mm   ·   197 g
Language German