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Annalina V. Mayer
Researcher at University of Lübeck
Publications - 14
Citations - 106
Annalina V. Mayer is an academic researcher from University of Lübeck. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 11 publications receiving 33 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The neuroscience of social feelings: mechanisms of adaptive social functioning.
Paul J. Eslinger,Silke Anders,Tomasso Ballarini,Sydney Weber Boutros,Sören Krach,Annalina V. Mayer,Jorge Moll,Tamara L. Newton,Matthias L. Schroeter,Ricardo de Oliveira-Souza,Jacob Raber,Gavin Brent Sullivan,James E. Swain,Leroy Lowe,Roland Zahn +14 more
TL;DR: In this article, the functional neuroanatomy and neurobiology of social feelings and their role in adaptive social functioning are examined, focusing on how they relate to cognition, emotion, behavior and well-being.
Journal ArticleDOI
Negativity-bias in forming beliefs about own abilities
Laura Müller-Pinzler,Laura Müller-Pinzler,Nora Czekalla,Annalina V. Mayer,David S. Stolz,Valeria Gazzola,Valeria Gazzola,Christian Keysers,Christian Keysers,Frieder M. Paulus,Sören Krach +10 more
TL;DR: Self-related belief formation is surprisingly negatively biased in situations suggesting opportunities to improve and this bias is shaped by trait differences in self-esteem and social anxiety.
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Laugh or cringe? Common and distinct processes of reward-based schadenfreude and empathy-based fremdscham.
Frieder M. Paulus,Laura Müller-Pinzler,Laura Müller-Pinzler,David S. Stolz,Annalina V. Mayer,Lena Rademacher,Sören Krach +6 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the valence and intensity of interpersonal emotions strongly depend on the experimental context and that empathy and reward circuits are involved in shaping the subjective experience.
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Randomized clinical trial shows no substantial modulation of empathy-related neural activation by intranasal oxytocin in autism.
Annalina V. Mayer,Anne-Kathrin Wermter,Sanna Stroth,Peter Alter,Michael Haberhausen,Thomas Stehr,Frieder M. Paulus,Sören Krach,Inge Kamp-Becker +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, a double-blind, cross-over, placebo-controlled fMRI-protocol, in which a single dose of oxytocin or placebo was applied intranasally.
Journal ArticleDOI
Spinach in the teeth: How ego- and allocentric perspectives modulate neural correlates of embarrassment in the face of others' public mishaps
TL;DR: For the first time, regions within the mentalizing network that contribute to a rather spontaneous versus a rather deliberate and motivated act of understanding other's mental states in the context of vicarious embarrassment are dissociate.