Madison Long
Max Planck Society
3 Papers
2 Citations
Madison Long is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attachment theory & Social neuroscience. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 2 publications. Previous affiliations of Madison Long include Alberta Children's Hospital.
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Papers
A Functional Neuro-Anatomical Model of Human Attachment (NAMA): Insights from First- and Second-Person Social Neuroscience
TL;DR: This review aims at summarizing the currently available social neuroscience data in healthy participants on how inter-individual differences in attachment associate with brain anatomy and activity across the lifespan, and to integrate these data into an extended and refined functional neuro-anatomical model of human attachment (NAMA).
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Hypothalamus volume in men: Investigating associations with paternal status, self-reported caregiving beliefs, and adult attachment style.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the volume of the hypothalamus, an important subcortical brain area for caregiving and attachment, in N = 50 fathering (child age 5-6 years) and N = 45 non-fathering men using a 3T MRI.
The effects of prenatal bisphenol A exposure on brain volume of children and young mice.
Jing Zheng,Jessica L. Reynolds,Madison Long,Curtis Ostertag,Tyler Pollock,Maxwell S. Hamilton,Jeff Dunn,Jiaying Liu,Melody N. Grohs,Bennett A. Landman,Yuankai Huo,Deborah Dewey,Deborah M. Kurrasch,C. Lebel +13 more
TL;DR: MRI data suggest that gestational exposure to low levels of BPA may have some impacts on the developing brain at the resolution of MRI, and maternal BPA exposure effects on brain volumes were small.