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      Social Cognitive Training Improves Emotional Processing and Reduces Aggressive Attitudes in Ex-combatants

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          Abstract

          Emotional processing (EP) is a complex cognitive function necessary to successfully adjust to social environments where we need to interpret and respond to cues that convey threat or reward signals. Ex-combatants have consistently shown atypical EP as well as poor social interactions. Available reintegration programs aim to facilitate the re-adaptation of ex-combatants to their communities. However, they do not incorporate actions to improve EP and to enhance cognitive-emotional regulation. The present study was aimed at evaluating the usefulness of an intervention focused on Social Cognitive Training (SCT), which was designed to equip ex-combatants enrolled in the Social Reintegration Route with EP and social cognition skills. A group of 31 ex-combatants (mean age of 37.2, 29 men) from Colombian illegal armed groups were recruited into this study. Of these, 16 were invited to take part in a SCT and the other continued with the conventional reintegration intervention. Both groups underwent 12 training sessions in a period 12–14 weeks. They were assessed with a comprehensive protocol which included Psychosocial, Behavioral, and Emotion Processing instruments. The scores on these instruments prior to and after the intervention were compared within and between groups. Both groups were matched at baseline. Ex-combatants receiving the SCT experienced significant improvements in EP and a reduction in aggressive attitudes, effects not observed in those continuing the conventional reintegration intervention. This is the first study that achieves such outcomes in such a population using SCT intervention. We discuss the implications of such results toward better social reintegration strategies.

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          Implicit measures in social cognition. research: their meaning and use.

          Behavioral scientists have long sought measures of important psychological constructs that avoid response biases and other problems associated with direct reports. Recently, a large number of such indirect, or "implicit," measures have emerged. We review research that has utilized these measures across several domains, including attitudes, self-esteem, and stereotypes, and discuss their predictive validity, their interrelations, and the mechanisms presumably underlying their operation. Special attention is devoted to various priming measures and the Implicit Association Test, largely due to their prevalence in the literature. We also attempt to clarify several unresolved theoretical and empirical issues concerning implicit measures, including the nature of the underlying constructs they purport to measure, the conditions under which they are most likely to relate to explicit measures, the kinds of behavior each measure is likely to predict, their sensitivity to context, and the construct's potential for change.
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            Eta-Squared and Partial Eta-Squared in Fixed Factor Anova Designs

            J J Cohen (1973)
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              Distributed and interactive brain mechanisms during emotion face perception: evidence from functional neuroimaging.

              Brain imaging studies in humans have shown that face processing in several areas is modulated by the affective significance of faces, particularly with fearful expressions, but also with other social signals such gaze direction. Here we review haemodynamic and electrical neuroimaging results indicating that activity in the face-selective fusiform cortex may be enhanced by emotional (fearful) expressions, without explicit voluntary control, and presumably through direct feedback connections from the amygdala. fMRI studies show that these increased responses in fusiform cortex to fearful faces are abolished by amygdala damage in the ipsilateral hemisphere, despite preserved effects of voluntary attention on fusiform; whereas emotional increases can still arise despite deficits in attention or awareness following parietal damage, and appear relatively unaffected by pharmacological increases in cholinergic stimulation. Fear-related modulations of face processing driven by amygdala signals may implicate not only fusiform cortex, but also earlier visual areas in occipital cortex (e.g., V1) and other distant regions involved in social, cognitive, or somatic responses (e.g., superior temporal sulcus, cingulate, or parietal areas). In the temporal domain, evoked-potentials show a widespread time-course of emotional face perception, with some increases in the amplitude of responses recorded over both occipital and frontal regions for fearful relative to neutral faces (as well as in the amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex, when using intracranial recordings), but with different latencies post-stimulus onset. Early emotional responses may arise around 120ms, prior to a full visual categorization stage indexed by the face-selective N170 component, possibly reflecting rapid emotion processing based on crude visual cues in faces. Other electrical components arise at later latencies and involve more sustained activities, probably generated in associative or supramodal brain areas, and resulting in part from the modulatory signals received from amygdala. Altogether, these fMRI and ERP results demonstrate that emotion face perception is a complex process that cannot be related to a single neural event taking place in a single brain regions, but rather implicates an interactive network with distributed activity in time and space. Moreover, although traditional models in cognitive neuropsychology have often considered that facial expression and facial identity are processed along two separate pathways, evidence from fMRI and ERPs suggests instead that emotional processing can strongly affect brain systems responsible for face recognition and memory. The functional implications of these interactions remain to be fully explored, but might play an important role in the normal development of face processing skills and in some neuropsychiatric disorders.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Psychol
                Front Psychol
                Front. Psychol.
                Frontiers in Psychology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-1078
                06 April 2017
                2017
                : 8
                : 510
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Grupo de Investigación en Salud Mental, Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública, Universidad de Antioquia Medellín, Colombia
                [2] 2Doctoral Program in Psychology, Department of Psychology, Universidad de Granada Granada, España
                [3] 3Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Granada Granada, Spain
                [4] 4Grupo de Neurociencias, Universidad de Antioquia Medellin, Colombia
                [5] 5SISTEMIC, Facultad de Ingeniería, Universidad de Antioquia Medellín, Colombia
                [6] 6Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Maastricht University Maastricht, Netherlands
                [7] 7Grupo de Neuropsicología y Conducta, Universidad de Antioquia Medellin, Colombia
                [8] 8School of Social Sciences, Psychology, Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, UK
                [9] 9Cerebro, Cognición y Procesos Sociales, Psicologia, Universidad Autónoma del Caribe Barranquilla, Colombia
                Author notes

                Edited by: Nuno Barbosa Rocha, School of Health (P.Porto), Portugal

                Reviewed by: Carlos Campos, School of Allied Health Sciences, Portugal; Serge Brand, University of Basel, Switzerland

                *Correspondence: Mario A. Parra m.parra_rodriguez@ 123456hw.ac.uk

                This article was submitted to Psychology for Clinical Settings, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00510
                5382221
                28428767
                ab70b330-aadf-444a-b3dc-f30becab6f72
                Copyright © 2017 Trujillo, Trujillo, Lopez, Gomez, Valencia, Rendon, Pineda and Parra.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 29 December 2016
                : 20 March 2017
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 2, Equations: 0, References: 87, Pages: 13, Words: 9920
                Funding
                Funded by: Departamento Administrativo de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación 10.13039/100007637
                Award ID: 111548925190
                Award ID: 122266140116
                Award ID: 111556933399
                Funded by: Newton Fund 10.13039/100010897
                Award ID: BC027-EDU2016
                Categories
                Psychology
                Original Research

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                emotional processing,social cognitive training,ex-combatants,aggression,intervention

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