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The goal of this single center non-interventional fMRI and EEG study is to assess the neural bases of social cognitive processing in healthy individuals, and whether/how their responsiveness is modulated by ageing. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Healthy participants will be recruited for:
Results will provide an useful baseline for investigating alterations of social cognitive processing, and of their neural bases, in pathological conditions.
Full description
The translational implications of results from social cognitive neuroscience are largely based on the increasing awareness on the role played by the so-called mirror and mentalizing brain networks in understanding others' behaviors and in decoding their intentions and feelings. The evidence obtained so far on the "social brain" in healthy young individuals nowadays constitutes the baseline for detecting changes in social cognitive skills associated with physiological aging or pathological conditions. The translational implications of social neuroscience are however constrained by some crucial limitations in the existing literature, that the present study aims to address. First, most the available evidence in social neuroscience results from studies assessing brain responses to the processing of single, rather than interacting, individuals. Second, most of the available knowledge concerns brain responses associated with observing others' behavior, while it is much less clear to what extent the same, or others, areas of the "social brain" are also engaged by social-related linguistic stimuli. Finally, despite the increasing emphasis on the potentially protective role of social cognition in physiological ageing, there is only preliminary evidence on possible changes of such responses in elderly individuals. On this ground, this single center non-interventional study aims to extend the available knowledge on the neural bases of social cognitive processing in 200 healthy individuals who will undergo either fMRI or EEG in association with tasks involving either visual or linguistic social stimuli concerning single and interacting individuals. In the case of EEG, data related to changes in brain electrical activity will be recorded with 64 channels. As to MRI, a multimodal session will include data concerning a) brain activity associated with social cognitive processing, b) brain structural morphometry (grey-matter volume/density), and c) brain structural connectivity (diffusion weighted imaging). Results from (f)MRI and EEG will be additionally related to individual differences in social cognitive skills, as measured through a behavioral assessment involving key variables of social cognition such as empathy (with the Balanced Emotional Empathy Scale (BEES) and the Interpersonal reactivity Index (IRI)) and mentalizing (with the Story-Based-Empathy taks and the Yoni task). MRI data will unveil the neural bases of individual differences in social cognitive performance in terms of performance-related patterns of brain activity, structure and connectivity. EEG will complement this evidence via data characterized by higher temporal resolution, to unveil the temporal development of social cognitive processes in the brain. Results will provide an useful baseline for investigating alterations of social cognition in physiological ageing and/or pathological conditions.
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200 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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