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Notícies sobre el grup, les seves activitats i altres temes relacionats
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Irene Audisio: "la multiplicidad del yo en Nietzsche" |
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Irene Audisio de la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba farà una xerrada.
Data: Dimecres 19 de desembre
Títol: "La multiplicidad del yo en Nietzsche"
Hora: 15:30
Lloc: edifici Ramon Llull.
Irene Audisio desenvolupà la seva tesi doctoral sobre les influencies psicològiques de Ribot i Tayne en l'obra de Nietzsche. Actualment és membre del Grupo de investigación en Empatía. |
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Xerrada sobre la recerca en Evolució del Llenguatge |
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L'investigador EVOCOG Lluís Barceló i Coblijn farà una xerrada:
Títol: "La facultat de llenguatge de l'ésser humà: investigant els seus orígens i evolució."
Data: 28-10-2012
Hora: 11:30 a.m.
Lloc: Aula de graus. Edifici Ramon Llull.
Organitzadors: Grup de recerca en anàlisi lingüística (GRALing). Universitat de les Illes Balears.
Aquesta xerrada és també una activitat complementària per als estudiants del curs de Màster " Evolució del llenguatge ".
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Nova publicació d'EVOCOG al Journal of Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience |
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Nova Publicació:
Referència:
Christensen, J.F., Flexas, A., de Miguel, P., Cela-Conde, C.J. (in press). Roman Catholic beliefs produce characteristic neural responses to moral dilemmas . Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience. doi: 10.1093/scan/nss121
RESUM:
This study provides exploratory evidence about how behavioral and neural responses to standard moral dilemmas are influenced by religious belief. Eleven Catholics and thirteen Atheists (all female) judged 48 moral dilemmas. Differential neural activity between the two groups was found in precuneus and in prefrontal, frontal and temporal regions. Furthermore, a double dissociation showed that Catholics recruited different areas for deontological (precuneus; temporoparietal junction [TPJ]) and utilitarian moral judgments (dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC]; temporal poles [TP]), whereas Atheists did not (superior parietal gyrus [SPG] for both types of judgment). Finally, we tested how both groups responded to personal and impersonal moral dilemmas: Catholics showed enhanced activity in DLPFC and posterior cingulate cortex [PCC] during utilitarian moral judgments to impersonal moral dilemmas, and enhanced responses in anterior cingulate cortex [ACC] and superior temporal sulcus [STS] during deontological moral judgments to personal moral dilemmas. Our results indicate that moral judgment can be influenced by an acquired set of norms and conventions transmitted through religious indoctrination and practice. Catholic individuals may hold enhanced awareness of the incommensurability between two unequivocal doctrines of the Catholic belief set, triggered explicitly in a moral dilemma: help and care in all circumstances -but thou shalt not kill.
Funding Information: FFI2010-20759 (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation), Clinica Rotger, Chair of the Three Religions (Government of the Balearic Islands), AP2009-2889 & AP2008-02284. |
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Olivera & Rosselló's new book! |
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Pàgina 1 de 23 |