Donnerstag, 12. April 2018, 17:00 - 18:30 iCal

Is it all Egopharmacology?

Social Cognition and Interaction in Stimulant Users

Talk of Prof. Dr. Boris B. Quednow (University of Zurich)

Faculty of Psychology (Lecture hall G, 2nd floor, left wing)
Liebigasse 5, 1010 Wien

Vortrag


Beyond impairments in attention, memory, and executive functions, chronic users of stimulant drugs also display specific disturbances in social cognition, which are contributing to social dysfunctions in their daily life. Recent studies have shown overlapping alterations in fear recognition from faces, emotion recognition from complex visual stimuli, emotional empathy, and mental and emotional perspective-taking (Theory-of-Mind) in stimulant users. Additionally, stimulant users often have smaller social networks and show less prosocial behaviour in game-theoretical social decision-making tasks. In social interaction and social feedback tasks during functional imaging cocaine users revealed decreased activation of the medial-frontal reward system. In conclusion, training of social reward and social cognition might improve social functioning including therapeutic relationships and, thus, enhance treatment success in stimulant addiction.


Veranstalter

Department of Basic Psychological Research and Research Methods (NBU)


Kontakt

Abla Marie-Jose Bedi
Institut für Psycholgogische Grundlagenforschung und Forschungsmethoden
NBU
+43-1-4277-47104
abla.bedi@univie.ac.at