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Thomas Baumgartner

Researcher at University of Bern

Publications -  57
Citations -  6716

Thomas Baumgartner is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 53 publications receiving 5991 citations. Previous affiliations of Thomas Baumgartner include University of Basel & University of Zurich.

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Social support and oxytocin interact to suppress cortisol and subjective responses to psychosocial stress

TL;DR: Oxytocin seems to enhance the buffering effect of social support on stress responsiveness, concur with data from animal research suggesting an important role of oxytocin as an underlying biological mechanism for stress-protective effects of positive social interactions.
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Oxytocin Shapes the Neural Circuitry of Trust and Trust Adaptation in Humans

TL;DR: It is found that subjects in the oxytocin group show no change in their trusting behavior after they learned that their trust had been breached several times while subjects receiving placebo decrease their trust.
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A Process Model of the Formation of Spatial Presence Experiences

TL;DR: In this article, a theoretical model of the formation of Spatial Presence is proposed, which is applicable to the exposure to different media and intended to unify the existing efforts to develop a theory of Presence.
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From emotion perception to emotion experience: Emotions evoked by pictures and classical music

TL;DR: Findings demonstrate that music can markedly enhance the emotional experience evoked by affective pictures, indicating the strongest activation in the combined conditions in a distributed emotion and arousal network comprising frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital neural structures.
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The emotional power of music: How music enhances the feeling of affective pictures

TL;DR: It is suggested that emotional pictures evoke a more cognitive mode of emotion perception, whereas congruent presentations of emotional visual and musical stimuli rather automatically evoke strong emotional feelings and experiences.