Marta Gozzi
National Institutes of Health
9 Papers
29 Citations
Marta Gozzi is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Social cognition. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 9 publications. Previous affiliations of Marta Gozzi include University of Milan.
Chat about Author
Papers
Compared to what? Early brain overgrowth in autism and the perils of population norms.
Armin Raznahan,Gregory L. Wallace,Ligia Antezana,Dede Greenstein,Rhoshel K. Lenroot,Audrey Thurm,Marta Gozzi,Sarah J. Spence,Alex Martin,Susan E. Swedo,Jay N. Giedd +10 more
TL;DR: Through systematic review and analysis of new data, it is shown that this overgrowth relative to norms is mimicked by patterns of HC growth age in a large contemporary community-based sample of US children (n ~ 75,000).
122
Mapping cortical anatomy in preschool aged children with autism using surface-based morphometry
Armin Raznahan,Rhoshel K. Lenroot,Audrey Thurm,Marta Gozzi,Allison Hanley,Sarah J. Spence,Sarah J. Spence,Susan E. Swedo,Jay N. Giedd +8 more
TL;DR: Children with autism showed focal, and CT-specific anatomical disruptions compared to TDCs, consisting of relative cortical thickening in regions with central roles in behavioral regulation, and the processing of language, biological movement and social information.
Interest in politics modulates neural activity in the amygdala and ventral striatum.
TL;DR: This study shows that having an interest in politics elicits activations in emotion‐ and reward‐related brain areas even when simply agreeing with written political opinions.
27
Recruitment of intuitive versus analytic thinking strategies affects the role of working memory in a gambling task.
TL;DR: This work aimed at reconciling inconsistencies by showing that the standard version of theGT can be solved using intuitive strategies operating automatically, while more complex versions require analytic strategies drawing on executive functions.
6
Individualism, conservatism, and radicalism as criteria for processing political beliefs: a parametric fMRI study.
TL;DR: The results extend current knowledge on the neural correlates of the structure of political beliefs, a fundamental aspect of the human ability to coalesce into social entities, by identifying which criteria/dimensions people use to structure complex political beliefs and which brain regions are concurrently activated.