Thursday, 16 February 2017

JNeurosci: Highlights from the Feb. 15 issue

(Society for Neuroscience) The context of a situation shapes how we respond to events and stimuli -- the sound of a gunshot, for example, would elicit profoundly different responses at a shooting range and a public park. In a new study examining how children's brains process context, researchers find children exposed to interpersonal violence have heightened responses to threat, which interferes with their ability to remember the context in which the threat occurred. They also have smaller hippocampi, the paired brain structures responsible for learning and memory. The results may help explain why children raised in dangerous environments are more fearful even in safe contexts.

from EurekAlert! - Social and Behavioral Science http://ift.tt/2lVUQEr

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