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Bert Timmermans

Researcher at University of Aberdeen

Publications -  43
Citations -  4033

Bert Timmermans is an academic researcher from University of Aberdeen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social cognition & Social relation. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 43 publications receiving 3600 citations. Previous affiliations of Bert Timmermans include Vrije Universiteit Brussel & Université libre de Bruxelles.

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Toward a second-person neuroscience.

TL;DR: Evidence from neuroimaging, psychophysiological studies, and related fields are reviewed to argue for the development of a second-person neuroscience, which will help neuroscience to really “go social” and may also be relevant for the understanding of psychiatric disorders construed as disorders of social cognition.
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The Geographic Distribution of Big Five Personality Traits Patterns and Profiles of Human Self-Description Across 56 Nations

David P. Schmitt, +123 more
TL;DR: The Big Five Inventory (BFI) is a self-report measure designed to assess the high-order personality traits of Extraversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness, Neuroticism, and Openness as discussed by the authors.
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Measuring consciousness: is one measure better than the other?

TL;DR: PAS seems to be the most exhaustive measure of awareness, and support for above-chance performance in the absence of subjective awareness is found, but such unconscious knowledge only contributes to performance when the authors observe conscious knowledge as well.
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Patterns and Universals of Adult Romantic Attachment Across 62 Cultural Regions Are Models of Self and of Other Pancultural Constructs

David P. Schmitt, +130 more
TL;DR: In the International Sexuality Description Project, a total of 17,804 participants from 62 cultural regions completed the RelationshipQuestionnaire (RQ), a self-report measure of adult romantic attachment as discussed by the authors.
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Introspective Minds: Using ALE Meta-Analyses to Study Commonalities in the Neural Correlates of Emotional Processing, Social & Unconstrained Cognition

TL;DR: Results of quantitative meta-analyses of neuroimaging studies are presented, which confirm a statistical convergence in the neural correlates of social and resting state cognition and provide evidence for the existence of a core neural network, which shows task-related signal change during socio-emotional tasks and during resting states.