Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Vascello, Matteo G F
Marchetti, Mauro
Scaltritti, Michele
Altoè, Gianmarco
Spada, Maria S
Molinero, Guido
and
Manfrinati, Andrea
2018.
Are Moral and Socio-conventional Knowledge Impaired in Severe Traumatic Brain Injury?.
Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology,
Vol. 33,
Issue. 5,
p.
583.
John, Michael
2021.
The “existential” in existential psychotherapy: pressing issues of everyday life necessitate intuition informed practice.
Australian Psychologist,
Vol. 56,
Issue. 5,
p.
427.
Target article
Précis on The Cognitive-Emotional Brain
Related commentaries (19)
Active inference and cognitive-emotional interactions in the brain
Behavioral evidence for a continuous approach to the perception of emotionally valenced stimuli
Cognition as the tip of the emotional iceberg: A neuro-evolutionary perspective
Enactive neuroscience, the direct perception hypothesis, and the socially extended mind
How arousal influences neural competition: What dual competition does not explain
Integration of cognition and emotion in physical and mental actions in musical and other behaviors
Models for cognition and emotion: Evolutionary and linguistic considerations
Neuropsychology still needs to model organismic processes “from within”
On emotion-cognition integration: The effect of happy and sad moods on language comprehension
On theory integration: Toward developing affective components within cognitive architectures
Precision about the automatic emotional brain
Preferences and motivations with and without inferences
Social theory and the cognitive-emotional brain
Strengthening emotion-cognition integration
Surprise as an ideal case for the interplay of cognition and emotion
The cognitive-emotional brain is an embodied and social brain
The cognitive-emotional brain: Opportunitvnies and challenges for understanding neuropsychiatric disorders
United we stand, divided we fall: Cognition, emotion, and the moral link between them
When emotion and cognition do (not) work together: Delusions as emotional and executive dysfunctions
Author response
The cognitive-emotional amalgam