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Annette Grossmann

Researcher at University of Rostock

Publications -  44
Citations -  2779

Annette Grossmann is an academic researcher from University of Rostock. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amygdala & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 41 publications receiving 2466 citations.

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Effects of intranasal oxytocin on emotional face processing in women.

TL;DR: Group analysis revealed that the blood-oxygen-level-dependent signal was enhanced in the left amygdala, the fusiform gyrus and the superior temporal gyrus in response to fearful faces and in the inferior frontal gyrus following OXT treatment, independent of fixation pattern to specific sections of the facial stimuli.
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Prevalence of Fabry disease in patients with cryptogenic stroke: a prospective study.

TL;DR: A high frequency of Fabry disease is shown in a cohort of patients with cryptogenic stroke, which corresponds to about 1.2% in young stroke patients, especially in those with the combination of infarction in the vertebrobasilar artery system and proteinuria.
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The Neural Correlates of Sex Differences in Emotional Reactivity and Emotion Regulation

TL;DR: Compared to women, men showed an increased recruitment of regulatory cortical areas during cognitively increasing initial emotional reactions, which was associated with an increase in amygdala activity, and women showed enhanced amygdala responding to aversive stimuli in the initial viewing phase.
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Neuronal Correlates of Cognitive Reappraisal in Borderline Patients with Affective Instability

TL;DR: The results point to the role of two distinguishable processes of emotional difficulties in borderline personality disorder: enhanced emotional reactivity as well as deficits of voluntarily decreasing aversive emotions by means of cognitive reappraisal.
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Effects of intranasal oxytocin on the neural basis of face processing in autism spectrum disorder

TL;DR: It is suggested that oxytocin might promote face processing and eye contact in individuals with ASD as prerequisites for neurotypical social interaction.