Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile
Leonhard Schilbach

@leoschilbach

Psychiater, Interaktionsforscher & sozialer Neurowissenschaftler. Hier privat. Psychiatrist, interaction researcher & social neuroscientist. Private account.

ID: 70205946

linkhttp://www.leonhardschilbach.de calendar_today30-08-2009 20:26:44

35,35K Tweet

6,6K Followers

4,4K Following

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Minds Made for Sharing: Initiating Joint Attention Recruits Reward-related Neurocircuitry | Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | MIT Press direct.mit.edu/jocn/article/2…

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Schema therapy versus cognitive behavioral therapy versus individual supportive therapy for depression in an inpatient and day clinic setting: study protocol of the OPTIMA-RCT | BMC Psychiatry bmcpsychiatry.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Influence of mental health literacy on help-seeking behaviour for mental health problems in the Swiss young adult community: a cohort and longitudinal case–control study link.springer.com/article/10.100…

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

A naturalistic paradigm simulating gaze-based social interactions for the investigation of social agency | Behavior Research Methods link.springer.com/article/10.375…

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Using interaction-based phenotyping to assess the behavioral and neural mechanisms of transdiagnostic social impairments in psychiatry | European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience link.springer.com/article/10.100…

Leonhard Schilbach (@leoschilbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Naturalizing psychopathology—towards a quantitative real-world psychiatry | Molecular Psychiatry nature.com/articles/s4138…

Jesus Ramirez-Bermudez (@jrbneuropsiq) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Participants experienced a perceptual illusion of reduced body ownership. Simultaneously, they rated how well various personality traits described them. Reduced body ownership was associated with more dispersed self-description clusters."