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Christoph Teufel

Researcher at Cardiff University

Publications -  40
Citations -  1351

Christoph Teufel is an academic researcher from Cardiff University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Perception & Social cognition. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1056 citations. Previous affiliations of Christoph Teufel include German Primate Center & University of Göttingen.

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Shift toward prior knowledge confers a perceptual advantage in early psychosis and psychosis-prone healthy individuals

TL;DR: Overall, it is shown that early psychosis and psychosis proneness both entail a basic shift in visual information processing, favoring prior knowledge over incoming sensory evidence, which may provoke anomalous perceptual experiences.
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Seeing other minds: attributed mental states influence perception.

TL;DR: It is suggested that social perception is subserved by an interactive bidirectional relationship between the neural mechanisms supporting basic sensory processing of social information and the theory-of-mind system, which cannot be divorced from its representation in terms of mental states.
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Association of trauma type, age of exposure, and frequency in childhood and adolescence with psychotic experiences in early adulthood

TL;DR: Findings are consistent with the thesis that trauma could have a causal association with psychotic experiences; if so, identification of modifiable mediators is required to inform prevention strategies.
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Mental-state attribution drives rapid, reflexive gaze following

TL;DR: It is shown that the attribution of the mental state “seeing” to a face plays a role in controlling even reflexive gaze following, and the gaze-cuing paradigm is modified to address this apparent contradiction.
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Social Cognition Modulates the Sensory Coding of Observed Gaze Direction

TL;DR: It is shown that the attribution of a mental state to another person determines the way in which the human brain codes observed gaze direction, indicating that high-level sociocognitive processes shape and modulate sensory coding of observed gazedirection.