Letting the good times roll: adolescence as a period of reduced inhibition to appetitive social cues
出版年份 2016 全文链接
标题
Letting the good times roll: adolescence as a period of reduced inhibition to appetitive social cues
作者
关键词
-
出版物
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Volume 11, Issue 11, Pages 1762-1771
出版商
Oxford University Press (OUP)
发表日期
2016-07-22
DOI
10.1093/scan/nsw096
参考文献
相关参考文献
注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。- Social re-orientation and brain development: An expanded and updated view
- (2016) Eric E. Nelson et al. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience
- Beyond Simple Models of Self-Control to Circuit-Based Accounts of Adolescent Behavior
- (2015) B. J. Casey Annual Review of Psychology
- Valence Asymmetries in the Human Amygdala: Task Relevance Modulates Amygdala Responses to Positive More than Negative Affective Cues
- (2015) Paul E. Stillman et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- The ties that bind: Group membership shapes the neural correlates of in-group favoritism
- (2015) Eva H. Telzer et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Neural correlates of biased social fear learning and interaction in an intergroup context
- (2015) Tanaz Molapour et al. NEUROIMAGE
- The salience network is responsible for switching between the default mode network and the central executive network: Replication from DCM
- (2014) Nia Goulden et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Response inhibition toward alcohol-related cues using an alcohol go/no-go task in problem and non-problem drinkers
- (2013) Fanny Kreusch et al. ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS
- Influence of Alcohol Use on Neural Response to Go/No-Go Task in College Drinkers
- (2013) Aral Ahmadi et al. NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
- Decision-making in the adolescent brain
- (2012) Sarah-Jayne Blakemore et al. NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
- Understanding adolescence as a period of social–affective engagement and goal flexibility
- (2012) Eveline A. Crone et al. NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE
- A generalized form of context-dependent psychophysiological interactions (gPPI): A comparison to standard approaches
- (2012) Donald G. McLaren et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Developmental changes in the structure of the social brain in late childhood and adolescence
- (2012) Kathryn L. Mills et al. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
- The development of emotion regulation: an fMRI study of cognitive reappraisal in children, adolescents and young adults
- (2012) Kateri McRae et al. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
- The fusiform response to faces: Explicit versus implicit processing of emotion
- (2011) Justin F. Monroe et al. HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
- Entering Adolescence: Resistance to Peer Influence, Risky Behavior, and Neural Changes in Emotion Reactivity
- (2011) Jennifer H. Pfeifer et al. NEURON
- Neural circuitry underlying affective response to peer feedback in adolescence
- (2011) Amanda E. Guyer et al. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
- What does the amygdala contribute to social cognition?
- (2010) Ralph Adolphs Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Frontostriatal Maturation Predicts Cognitive Control Failure to Appetitive Cues in Adolescents
- (2010) Leah H. Somerville et al. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
- Developmental influences on the neural bases of responses to social rejection: Implications of social neuroscience for education
- (2010) Catherine L. Sebastian et al. NEUROIMAGE
- Which Cue to "Want?" Central Amygdala Opioid Activation Enhances and Focuses Incentive Salience on a Prepotent Reward Cue
- (2009) S. V. Mahler et al. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
- The Adolescent Brain
- (2008) B.J. Casey et al. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Biological Substrates of Emotional Reactivity and Regulation in Adolescence During an Emotional Go-Nogo Task
- (2008) Todd A. Hare et al. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
- Adolescents and androgens, receptors and rewards
- (2008) Satoru M. Sato et al. HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR
Discover Peeref hubs
Discuss science. Find collaborators. Network.
Join a conversationCreate your own webinar
Interested in hosting your own webinar? Check the schedule and propose your idea to the Peeref Content Team.
Create Now