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Literaturliste von Prof. Dr. Tania Singer

letzte Aktualisierung: 24.11.2023

Godara, M., Rademacher, J., Hecht, M., Silveira, S., Voelkle, M. C. & Singer, T. (2023). Heterogeneous mental health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany: An examination of long-term trajectories, risk factors, and vulnerable groups. Healthcare, 11(9), No. 1305.

Liebmann, C., Konrad, A. C., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2023). Differential reduction of psychological distress by three different types of meditation-based mental training programs: A randomized clinical trial. International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology (IJCHP), 23(4), No. 100388.

Silveira, S., Hecht, M., Voelkle, M. C. & Singer, T. (2023). Tend-and-befriend and rally around the flag effects during the COVID-19 pandemic: Differential longitudinal change patterns in multiple aspects of social cohesion. European Journal of Social Psychology, 53(6), 1276-1293.

Valk, S. L., Kanske, P., Park, B.-y., Hong, S.-J., Böckler, A., Trautwein, F.-M., Bernhardt, B. C. & Singer, T. (2023). Functional and microstructural plasticity following social and interoceptive mental training. eLife, 12, No. e85188.

Godara, M., Silveira, S., Matthäus, H. & Singer, T. (2022). The Wither or Thrive Model of Resilience: An integrative framework of dynamic vulnerability and resilience in the face of repeated stressors during the COVID-19 pandemic. Adversity and Resilience Science, 3(4), 261-282.

Hoehne, K., Vrti^D%cka, P., Engert, V. & Singer, T. (2022). Plasma oxytocin is modulated by mental training, but does not mediate its stress-buffering effect. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 141, No. 105734.

Linz, R., Puhlmann, L. M. C., Engert, V. & Singer, T. (2022). Investigating the impact of distinct contemplative mental trainings on daily life stress, thoughts and affect - Evidence from a nine-month longitudinal ecological momentary assessment study. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 142, No. 105800.

Silveira, S., Hecht, M., Adli, M., Voelkle, M. C. & Singer, T. (2022). Exploring the structure and interrelations of time-stable psychological resilience, psychological vulnerability, and social cohesion. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 13, No. 804763.

Silveira, S., Hecht, M., Matthaeus, H., Adli, M., Voelkle, M. C. & Singer, T. (2022). Coping with the COVID-19 pandemic: Perceived changes in psychological vulnerability, resilience and social cohesion before, during and after lockdown. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(6), No. 3290.

Böckler, A. & Singer, T. (2021). Longitudinal evidence for differential plasticity of cognitive functions: Mindfulness-based mental training enhances working memory, but not perceptual discrimination, response inhibition, and metacognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology - General, 1-19.

Chierchia, G., Parianen Lesemann, F. H., Snower, D. & Singer, T. (2021). Cooperation across multiple game theoretical paradigms is increased by fear more than anger in selfish individuals. Scientific Reports, 11, No. 9351.

Chierchia, G., Przyrembel, M., Lesemann, F. P., Bosworth, S., Snower, D. & Singer, T. (2021). Navigating motivation: A semantic and subjective atlas of 7 motives. Frontiers in Psychology, 11, No. 568064.

Favre, P., Kanske, P., Engen, H. & Singer, T. (2021). Decreased emotional reactivity after 3-month socio-affective but not attention- or meta-cognitive-based mental training: A randomized, controlled, longitudinal fMRI study. NeuroImage, 237, No. 118132.

Godara, M., Silveira, S., Matthäus, H., Heim, C., Voelkle, M., Hecht, M., Binder, E. B. & Singer, T. (2021). Investigating differential effects of socio-emotional and mindfulness-based online interventions on mental health, resilience and social capacities during the COVID-19 pandemic: The study protocol. PLoS ONE, 16(11), No. e0256323.

Puhlmann, L. M. C., Vrti^D%cka, P., Linz, R., Stalder, T., Kirschbaum, C., Engert, V. & Singer, T. (2021). Contemplative mental training reduces hair glucocorticoid levels in a randomized clinical trial. Psychosomatic Medicine, 83(8), 894-905.

Grosse Wiesmann, C., Friederici, A. D., Singer, T. & Steinbeis, N. (2020). Two systems for thinking about others' thoughts in the developing brain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 117(12), 6928-6935.

Tholen, M. G., Trautwein, F.-M., Böckler, A., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2020). Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) item analysis of empathy and Theory of Mind. Human Brain Mapping, 41(10), 2611-2628.

Trautwein, F.-M., Kanske, P., Böckler, A. & Singer, T. (2020). Differential benefits of mental training types for attention, compassion, and theory of mind. Cognition, 194, No. 104039.

Bornemann, B., Kovacs, P. & Singer, T. (2019). Voluntary upregulation of heart rate variability through biofeedback is improved by mental contemplative training. Scientific Reports, 9, No. 7860.

Hildebrandt, L. K., McCall, C. & Singer, T. (2019). Socioaffective versus sociocognitive mental trainings differentially affect emotion regulation strategies. Emotion, 19(8), 1329-1342.

Linz, R., Puhlmann, L. M. C., Apostolakou, F., Mantzou, E., Papassotiriou, I., Chrousos, G. P., Engert, V. & Singer, T. (2019). Acute psychosocial stress increases serum BDNF levels: An antagonistic relation to cortisol but no group differences after mental training. Neuropsychopharmacology, 44(10), 1797-1804.

Preckel, K., Trautwein, F.-M., Paulus, F. M., Kirsch, P., Krach, S., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2019). Neural mechanisms of affective matching across faces and scenes. Scientific Reports, 9, No. 1492.

Przyrembel, M., Vrticka, P., Engert, V. & Singer, T. (2019). Loving-kindness meditation - A queen of hearts?: A physio-phenomenological investigation on the variety of experience. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 26(7-8), 95-129.

Puhlmann, L. M. C., Engert, V., Apostolakou, F., Papassotiriou, I., Chrousos, G. P., Vrticka, P. & Singer, T. (2019). Only vulnerable adults show change in chronic low-grade inflammation after contemplative mental training: Evidence from a randomized clinical trial. Scientific Reports, 9, No. 19323.

Singer, T. & Engert, V. (2019). It matters what you practice: Differential training effects on subjective experience, behavior, brain and body in the ReSource Project. Current Opinion in Psychology, 28, 151-158.

Banzhaf, C., Hoffmann, F., Kanske, P., Fan, Y., Walter, H., Spengler, S., Schreiter, S., Singer, T. & Bermpohl, F. (2018). Interacting and dissociable effects of alexithymia and depression on empathy. Psychiatry Research, 270, 631-638.

Böckler, A., Tusche, A., Schmidt, P. & Singer, T. (2018). Distinct mental trainings differentially affect altruistically motivated, norm motivated, and self-reported prosocial behaviour. Scientific Reports, 8, No. 13560.

Böckler, A., Tusche, A. & Singer, T. (2018). The structure of human prosociality revisited: Corrigendum and addendum to Bockler, Tusche, and Singer (2016). Social Psychological and Personality Science, 9(6), 754-759.

Engen, H. G., Bernhardt, B. C., Skottnik, L., Ricard, M. & Singer, T. (2018). Structural changes in socio-affective networks: Multi-modal MRI findings in long-term meditation practitioners. Neuropsychologia, 116, 26-33.

Engen, H., Kanske, P. & Singer, T. (2018). Endogenous emotion generation ability is associated with the capacity to form multimodal internal representations. Scientific Reports, 8, No. 1953.

Engert, V., Kok, B. E., Puhlmann, L. M., Stalder, T., Kirschbaum, C., Apostolakou, F., Papanastasopoulou, C., Papassotiriou, I., Pervanidou, P., Chrousos, G. P. & Singer, T. (2018). Exploring the multidimensional complex systems structure of the stress response and its relation to health and sleep outcomes. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, 73, 390-402.

Engert, V., Ragsdale, A. M. & Singer, T. (2018). Cortisol stress resonance in the laboratory is associated with inter-couple diurnal cortisol covariation in daily life. Hormones and Behavior, 98, 183-190.

Grosse Wiesmanna, C., Friederici, A. D., Disla, D., Steinbeis, N. & Singer, T. (2018). Longitudinal evidence for 4-year-olds' but not 2-and 3-year-olds' false belief-related action anticipation. Cognitive Development, 46, 58-68.

Linz, R., Singer, T. & Engert, V. (2018). Interactions of momentary thought content and subjective stress predict cortisol fluctuations in a daily life experience sampling study. Scientific Reports, 8, No. 15462.

Lumma, A.-L., Valk, S. L., Böckler, A., Vrticka, P. & Singer, T. (2018). Change in emotional self-concept following socio-cognitive training relates to structural plasticity of the prefrontal cortex. Brain and Behavior, 8(4), No. e00940.

Przyrembel, M. & Singer, T. (2018). Experiencing meditation - Evidence for differential effects of three contemplative mental practices in micro-phenomenological interviews. Consciousness and Cognition, 62, 82-101.

Böckler, A., Sharifi, M., Kanske, P., Dziobek, I. & Singer, T. (2017). Social decision making in narcissism: Reduced generosity and increased retaliation are driven by alterations in perspective-taking and anger. Personality and Individual Differences, 104, 1-7.

Chierchia, G., Lesemann, F. H. P., Singer, T., Snower, D. & Vogel, M. (2017). Caring Cooperators and Powerful Punishers: Differential Effects of Induced Care and Power Motivation on Different Types of Economic Decision Making. Scientific Reports (Online Journal), No. 11068.

Engen, H. G., Kanske, P. & Singer, T. (2017). The neural component-process architecture of endogenously generated emotion. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 12(2), 197-211.

Engen, H. G., Smallwood, J. & Singer, T. (2017). Differential impact of emotional task relevance on three indices of prioritised processing for fearful and angry facial expressions. Cognition and Emotion, 31(1), 175-184.

Engert, V., Kok, B. E., Papassotiriou, I., Chrousos, G. P. & Singer, T. (2017). Specific reduction in cortisol stress reactivity after social but not attention-based mental training. Science Advances, 3(10), No. e1700495.

Hildebrandt, L. K., McCall, C. & Singer, T. (2017). Differential effects of attention-, compassion-, and socio-cognitively based mental practices on self-reports of mindfulness and compassion. Mindfulness, 8(6), 1488-1512.

Kamp-Becker, I., Stroth, S., Wermter, A.-K., Poustka, L., Schad-Hansjosten, T., Bachmann, C., Ehrlich, S., Roessner, V., Hoffmann, F., Kanske, P., Singer, T., Kirsch, P., Krach, S., Paulus, F. M., Rietschel, M., Witt, S. & Roepke, S. (2017). Study protocol of the ASD-Net, the German research consortium for the study of Autism Spectrum Disorder across the lifespan: from a better etiological understanding, through valid diagnosis, to more effective health care. BMC Psychiatry (Online Journal), No. 206.

Kanske, P., Sharifi, M., Smallwood, J., Dziobek, I. & Singer, T. (2017). Where the narcissistic mind wanders: Increased self-related thoughts are more positive and future oriented. Journal of Personality Disorders, 31(4), 553-566.

Kok, B. E. & Singer, T. (2017). Effects of contemplative dyads on engagement and perceived social connectedness over 9 months of mental training a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Psychiatry, 74(2), 126-134.

Kok, B. E. & Singer, T. (2017). Phenomenological fingerprints of four meditations: Differential state changes in affect, mind-wandering, meta-cognition, and interoception before and after daily practice across 9 months of training. Mindfulness, 8(1), 218-231.

Lumma, A.-L., Böckler, A., Vrticka, P. & Singer, T. (2017). Who am i? Differential effects of three contemplative mental trainings on emotional word use in self-descriptions. Self and Identity, 16(5), 607-628.

Valk, S. L., Bernhardt, B. C., Böckler, A., Trautwein, F.-M., Kanske, P. & Singer, T. (2017). Socio-cognitive phenotypes differentially modulate large-scale structural covariance networks. Cerebral Cortex, 27(2), 1358-1368.

Valk, S. L., Bernhardt, B. C., Trautwein, F.-M., Böckler, A., Kanske, P., Guizard, N., Collins, D. L. & Singer, T. (2017). Structural plasticity of the social brain: Differential change after socio-affective and cognitive mental training. Science Advances, 3, No. e1700489.

Wiesmann, C. G., Friederici, A. D., Singer, T. & Steinbeis, N. (2017). Implicit and explicit false belief development in preschool children. Developmental Science, 20(5), No. e12445.

Wiesmann, C. G., Schreiber, J., Singer, T., Steinbeis, N. & Friederici, A. D. (2017). White matter maturation is associated with the emergence of Theory of Mind in early childhood. Nature Communications, 8, No. 14692.

Winter, K., Spengler, S., Bermpohl, F., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2017). Social cognition in aggressive offenders: Impaired empathy, but intact theory of mind. Scientific Reports (Online Journal), No. 670.

Boeckler, A., Tusche, A. & Singer, T. (2016). The structure of human prosociality: Differentiating altruistically motivated, norm motivated, strategically motivated, and self-reported prosocial behavior. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 7(6), 530-541.

Bornemann, B., Kok, B. E., Böckler, A. & Singer, T. (2016). Helping from the heart: Voluntary upregulation of heart rate variability predicts altruistic behavior. Biological Psychology, 119, 54-63.

Bosworth, S. J., Singer, T. & Snower, D. J. (2016). Cooperation, motivation and social balance. Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 126, 72-94.

Corradi-Dell'Acqua, C., Vuilleumier, P., Tusche, A. & Singer, T. (2016). Cross-modal representations of first-hand and vicarious pain, disgust and fairness in insular and cingulate cortex. Nature Communications.

Engert, V., Koester, A. M., Riepenhausen, A. & Singer, T. (2016). Boosting recovery rather than buffering reactivity: Higher stress-induced oxytocin secretion is associated with increased cortisol reactivity and faster vagal recovery after acute psychosocial stress. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 74, 111-120.

Hildebrandt, L. K., Mccall, C., Engen, H. G. & Singer, T. (2016). Cognitive flexibility, heart rate variability, and resilience predict fine-grained regulation of arousal during prolonged threat. Psychophysiology, 53(6), 880-890.

Hoffmann, F., Banzhaf, C., Kanske, P., Bermpohl, F. & Singer, T. (2016). Where the depressed mind wanders: Self-generated thought patterns as assessed through experience sampling as a state marker of depression. Journal of Affective Disorders, 198, 127-134.

Hoffmann, F., Banzhaf, C., Kanske, P., Gärtner, M., Bermpohl, F. & Singer, T. (2016). Empathy in depression: Egocentric and altercentric biases and the role of alexithymia. Journal of Affective Disorders, 199, 23-29.

Hoffmann, F., Koehne, S., Steinbeis, N., Dziobek, I. & Singer, T. (2016). Preserved self-other distinction during empathy in autism is linked to network integrity of right supramarginal gyrus. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 46(2), 637-648.

Kanske, P., Böckler, A., Trautwein, F.-M., Lesemann, F. H. P. & Singer, T. (2016). Are strong empathizers better mentalizers? Evidence for independence and interaction between the routes of social cognition. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 11(9), 1383-1392.

Kanske, P., Schulze, L., Dziobek, I., Scheibner, H., Roepke, S. & Singer, T. (2016). The wandering mind in borderline personality disorder: Instability in self- and other-related thoughts. Psychiatry Research, 242, 302-310.

McCall, C., Hildebrandt, L. K., Hartmann, R., Baczkowski, B. M. & Singer, T. (2016). Introducing the Wunderkammer as a tool for emotion research: Unconstrained gaze and movement patterns in three emotionally evocative virtual worlds. Computers in Human Behavior, 59, 93-107.

Molenberghs, P., Trautwein, F.-M., Böckler, A., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2016). Neural correlates of metacognitive ability and of feeling confident: A large-scale fMRI study. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 11(12), 1942-1951.

Preckel, K., Kanske, P., Singer, T., Paulus, F. M. & Krach, S. (2016). Clinical trial of modulatory effects of oxytocin treatment on higher-order social cognition in autism spectrum disorder: A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind and crossover trial. BMC Psychiatry (Online Journal), 16, No. 329.

Steinbeis, N., Singer, T., Haushofer, J. & Fehr, E. (2016). Development of Behavioral Control and Associated vmPFC-DLPFC Connectivity Explains Children's Increased Resistance to Temptation in Intertemporal Choice. Cerebral Cortex, 26(1), 32-42.

Trautwein, F.-M., Singer, T. & Kanske, P. (2016). Stimulus-driven reorienting impairs executive control of attention: Evidence for a common bottleneck in anterior insula. Cerebral Cortex, 26(11), 4136-4147.

Tusche, A., Böckler, A., Kanske, P., Trautwein, F.-M. & Singer, T. (2016). Decoding the charitable brain: Empathy, perspective taking, and attention shifts differentially predict altruistic giving. Journal of Neuroscience, 36(17), 4719-4732.

Valk, S. L., Bernhardt, B. C., Böckler, A., Kanske, P. & Singer, T. (2016). Substrates of metacognition on perception and metacognition on higher-order cognition relate to different subsystems of the mentalizing network. Human Brain Mapping, 37(10), 3388-3399.

Zaki, J., Wager, T. D., Singer, T., Keysers, C. & Gazzola, V. (2016). The Anatomy of Suffering: Understanding the Relationship between Nociceptive and Empathic Pain. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 20(4), 249-259.

Bornemann, B., Herbert, B. M., Mehling, W. E. & Singer, T. (2015). MAIA - Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness - deutsche Fassung. (PSYNDEX Tests Info).

Bornemann, B., Herbert, B. M., Mehling, W. E. & Singer, T. (2015). Differential changes in self-reported aspects of interoceptive awareness through 3 months of contemplative training. Frontiers in Psychology (Online Journal), 5, No. 1504.

Engen, H. G. & Singer, T. (2015). Compassion-based emotion regulation up-regulates experienced positive affect and associated neural networks. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 10(9), 1291-1301.

Hoffmann, F., Singer, T. & Steinbeis, N. (2015). Children's increased emotional egocentricity compared to adults is mediated by age-related differences in conflict processing. Child Development, 86(3), 765-780.

Kanske, P., Böckler, A., Trautwein, F.-M. & Singer, T. (2015). Dissecting the social brain: Introducing the EmpaToM to reveal distinct neural networks and brain-behavior relations for empathy and Theory of Mind. NeuroImage, 122, 6-19.

Lamm, C., Silani, G. & Singer, T. (2015). Distinct neural networks underlying empathy for pleasant and unpleasant touch. Cortex, 70, 79-89.

Lumma, A.-L., Kok, B. E. & Singer, T. (2015). Is meditation always relaxing? Investigating heart rate, heart rate variability, experienced effort and likeability during training of three types of meditation. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 97(1), 38-45.

McCall, C., Hildebrandt, L. K., Bornemann, B. & Singer, T. (2015). Physiophenomenology in retrospect: Memory reliably reflects physiological arousal during a prior threatening experience. Consciousness and Cognition, 60-70.

McCall, C. & Singer, T. (2015). Facing off with unfair others: Introducing proxemic imaging as an implicit measure of approach and avoidance during social interaction. PLoS ONE, 10(2), No. e0117532.

Steinbeis, N., Bernhardt, B. C. & Singer, T. (2015). Age-related differences in function and structure of rSMG and reduced functional connectivity with DLPFC explains heightened emotional egocentricity bias in childhood. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 10(2), 302-310.

Steinbeis, N., Engert, V., Linz, R. & Singer, T. (2015). The effects of stress and affiliation on social decision-making: Investigating the tend-and-befriend pattern. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 138-148.

Bernhardt, B. C., Klimecki, O. M., Singer, T. & Leiberg, S. (2014). Structural Covariance Networks of the Dorsal Anterior Insula Predict Females' Individual Differences in Empathic Responding. Cerebral Cortex, 24(8), 2189-2198.

Bernhardt, B. C., Smallwood, J., Tusche, A., Ruby, F. J. M., Engen, H. G., Steinbeis, N. & Singer, T. (2014). Medial prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortical thickness predicts, shared individual differences in self-generated thought and temporal discounting. NeuroImage, 290-297.

Bernhardt, B. C., Valk, S. L., Silani, G., Bird, G., Frith, U. & Singer, T. (2014). Selective disruption of sociocognitive structural brain networks in autism and alexithymia. Cerebral Cortex, 24(12), 3258-3267.

Cooper, E. A., Garlick, J., Featherstone, E., Voon, V., Singer, T., Critchley, H. D. & Harrison, N. A. (2014). You turn me cold: Evidence for temperature contagion. PLoS ONE, 9(12), No. e116126.

Engert, V., Grant, J. A., Tusche, A., Singer, T., Merla, A. & Cardone, D. (2014). Exploring the Use of Thermal Infrared Imaging in Human Stress Research. PLoS ONE, 9(3), e90782.

Engert, V., Plessow, F., Miller, R., Kirschbaum, C. & Singer, T. (2014). Cortisol increase in empathic stress is modulated by emotional closeness and observation modality. Psychoneuroendocrinology, 45, 192-201.

Engert, V., Smallwood, J. & Singer, T. (2014). Mind your thoughts: Associations between self-generated thoughts and stress-induced and baseline levels of cortisol and alpha-amylase. Biological Psychology, 103, 283-291.

Klimecki, O. M., Leiberg, S., Ricard, M. & Singer, T. (2014). Differential pattern of functional brain plasticity after compassion and empathy training. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 9(6), 873-879.

McCall, C., Steinbeis, N., Ricard, M. & Singer, T. (2014). Compassion meditators show less anger, less punishment and more compensation of victims in response to fairness violations. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience (Online Journal), 8, No. 424.

Singer, T. & Tusche, A. (2014). Understanding others: Brain mechanisms of theory of mind and empathy. In P. W. Glimcher & E. Fehr (Eds.), Neuroeconomics. Decision making and the brain (pp. 513-532). London: Academic Press.

Steinbeis, N. & Singer, T. (2014). Projecting my envy onto you: Neurocognitive mechanisms of an offline emotional egocentricity bias. NeuroImage, 102, 370-380.

Tusche, A., Smallwood, J., Bernhardt, B. C. & Singer, T. (2014). Classifying the wandering mind: Revealing the affective content of thoughts during task-free rest periods. NeuroImage, 107-116.

Bornemann, B. & Singer, T. (2013). A cognitive neuroscience perspective - The ReSource model. In T. Singer & M. Bolz (Eds.), Compassion: Bridging practice and science (eBook) (pp. 296-324).

Bornemann, B. & Singer, T. (2013). The ReSource training protocol. In T. Singer & M. Bolz (Eds.), Compassion: Bridging practice and science (eBook) (pp. 768-792).

Bornemann, B. & Singer, T. (2013). What we do (not) mean by training. In T. Singer & M. Bolz (Eds.), Compassion: Bridging practice and science (eBook) (pp. 54-57).

Engen, H. G. & Singer, T. (2013). Empathy circuits. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 23(2), 275-282.

Klimecki, O. M., Ricard, M. & Singer, T. (2013). Empathy versus compassion: Lessons from 1st and 3rd person methods. In T. Singer & M. Bolz (Eds.), Compassion: Bridging practice and science (eBook) (pp. 464-487).

Klimecki, O. M., Singer, T., Leiberg, S. & Lamm, C. (2013). Functional Neural Plasticity and Associated Changes in Positive Affect After Compassion Training. Cerebral Cortex, 23(7), 1552-1561.

Klimecki, O. & Singer, T. (2013). Empathy from the perspective of social neuroscience. In J. Armory & P. Vuilleumier (Eds.), The Cambridge handbook of human affective neuroscience (pp. 533-549). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Leiberg, S. & Singer, T. (2013). Empathie. In E. Schröger & S. Koelsch (Hrsg.), Affektive und Kognitive Neurowissenschaft (S. 119-154). Göttingen: Hogrefe.

McCall, C. & Singer, T. (2013). Empathy and the brain. In S. Baron-Cohen, H. Tager-Flusberg & M. Lombardo (Eds.), Understanding other minds. Perspectives from developmental social neuroscience (pp. 195-213). New York: Oxford University Press.

Ruby, F. J. M., Smallwood, J., Engen, H. & Singer, T. (2013). How self-generated thought shapes mood - The relation between mind-wandering and mood depends on the socio-temporal content of thoughts. PLoS ONE, 8(10), No. e77554.

Ruby, F. J. M., Smallwood, J., Sackur, J. & Singer, T. (2013). Is self-generated thought a means of social problem solving? Frontiers in Psychology (Online Journal), 4, No. 962.

Silani, G., Lamm, C., Ruff, C. C. & Singer, T. (2013). Right Supramarginal Gyrus Is Crucial to Overcome Emotional Egocentricity Bias in Social Judgments. Journal of Neuroscience, 33(39), 15466-15476.

Singer, T. & Bolz, M. (Hrsg.). (2013). Mitgefühl in Alltag und Forschung. München: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft.

Steinbeis, N. & Singer, T. (2013). The effects of social comparison on social emotions and behavior during childhood: The ontogeny of envy and schadenfreude predicts developmental changes in equity-related decisions. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 115(1), 198-209.

Bernhard, B. C. & Singer, T. (2012). The neural basis of empathy. Annual Review of Neuroscience, 35, 1-23.

Klimecki, O. & Singer, T. (2012). Empathic distress fatigue rather than compassion fatigue? Integrating findings from empathy research in psychology and social neuroscience. In B. Oakley, A. Knafo, G. Madhavan & D. Wilson (Eds.), Pathological altruism (pp. 368-383). New York: Oxford University Press.

McCall, C. & Singer, T. (2012). The animal and human neuroendocrinology of social cognition, motivation and behavior. Nature Neuroscience, 15(5), 681-688.

Przyrembel, M., Smallwood, J., Pauen, M. & Singer, T. (2012). Illuminating the dark matter of social neuroscience: Considering the problem of social interaction from philosophical, psychological, and neuroscientific perspectives. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 6, No. 190.

Singer, T. (2012). The past, present and future of social neuroscience: A European perspective. NeuroImage, 61(2), 437-449.

Singer, T. & Hein, G. (2012). Empathy in humans and animals: An integrative approach. In F. B. M. de Waal & P. F. Ferrari (Eds.), The primate mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Singer, T. & Hein, G. (2012). Human empathy through the lens of psychology and social neuroscience. In F. B. M. de Waal & P. F. Ferrari (Eds.), The primate mind. Built to connect with other minds (pp. 158-174). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Smallwood, J., Ruby, F. J. M. & Singer, T. (2012). Letting go of the present: Task unrelated thought is associated with reduced delay discounting. Consciousness and Cognition, 22(1), 1-7.

Steinbeis, N., Brenhardt, B. C. & Singer, T. (2012). Impulse control and underlying functions of the left DLPFC mediate age-related and age-independent individual differences in strategic social behavior. Neuron, 73, 1040-1051.

Ugazio, G., Lamm, C. & Singer, T. (2012). The role of emotions for moral judgments depends on the type of emotion and moral scenario. Emotion, 12(3), 579-590.

Frevert, U. & Singer, T. (2011). Empathie und ihre Blockaden. Über soziale Emotionen. In T. Bonhoeffer & P. Gruss (Hrsg.), Zukunft Gehirn. Neue Erkenntnisse, neue Herausforderungen. Ein Report der Max-Planck-Gesellschaft (S. 121-146). München: Beck.

Hein, G., Lamm, C., Brodbeck, C. & Singer, T. (2011). Skin Conductance Response to the Pain of Others Predicts Later Costly Helping. PLoS ONE, 6(8).

Lamm, C., Decety, J. & Singer, T. (2011). Meta-analytic evidence for common and distinct neural networks associated with directly experienced pain and empathy for pain. NeuroImage, 54(3), 2492-2502.

Leiberg, S., Klimecki, O. & Singer, T. (2011). Short-term compassion training increases prosocial behavior in a newly developed prosocial game. PLoS ONE, 6(3), e17798.

Singer, T. & Decety, J. (2011). Social neuroscience of empathy. In J. Decety & J. T. Cacioppo (Eds.), Handbook of social neuroscience (pp. 551-564). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

Bird, G., Silani, G., Brindley, R., White, S., Frith, U. & Singer, T. (2010). Empathic brain responses in insula are modulated by levels of alexithymia but not autism. Brain, 1515-1525.

Hein, G., Silani, G., Preuschoff, K., Batson, C. D. & Singer, T. (2010). Neural responses to ingroup and outgroup members' suffering predict individual differences in costly helping. Neuron, 68(1), 149-160.

Hein, G. & Singer, T. (2010). Neuroscience meets social psychology: An integrative approach to human empathy and prosocial behavior. In M. Mikulincer & P. R. Shaver (Eds.), Prosocial motives, emotions, and behavior. The better angels of our nature (pp. 109-125). Washington: American Psychological Association.

Lamm, C. & Singer, T. (2010). The role of anterior insular cortex in social emotions. Brain Structure and Function, 214(5-6), 579-591.

Singer, T., Critchley, H. D. & Preuschoff, K. (2009). A common role of insula in feelings, empathy and uncertainty. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 13(8), 334-340.

Singer, T. & Lamm, C. (2009). The social neuroscience of empathy. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 81-96.

Singer, T. & Leiberg, S. (2009). Sharing the emotions of others: The neural bases of empathy. In M. S. Gazzaniga (Ed.), The cognitive neurosciences (pp. 973-986). Cambridge: MIT Press.

Singer, T. & Steinbeis, N. (2009). Differential roles of fairness- and compassion-based motivations for cooperation, defection, and punishment. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1167, 41-50.

Snozzi, R. & Singer, T. (2009). Empathie aus der Sicht der sozialen Neurowissenschaften. In J. Fehr & G. Folkers (Hrsg.), Gefühle zeigen. Manifestationsformen emotionaler Prozesse (S. 973-986). Zürich: Chronos.

Frith, C. D. & Singer, T. (2008). The role of social cognition in decision making. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences, 363(1511), 3875-3886.

Hein, G. & Singer, T. (2008). I feel how you feel but not always: The empathic brain and its modulation. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 18(2), 153-158.

Lubell, M., Engel, C., Glimcher, P. W., Hastie, R., Rachlinski, J. J., Rockenbach, B., Selten, R., Singer, T. & Weber, E. U. (2008). Institutional design capitalizing on the intuitive nature of decision making. In C. Engel & W. Singer (Eds.), Better than conscious? Decision making, the human mind, and implications for institutions (pp. 413-432). Cambridge: MIT Press.

McCabe, K. & Singer, T. (2008). Brain signatures of social decision making. In C. Engel & W. Singer (Eds.), Better than conscious? Decision making, the human mind, and implications for institutions (pp. 103-122). Cambridge: MIT Press.

Petrovic, P., Kalisch, R., Pessiglione, M., Singer, T. & Dolan, R. J. (2008). Learning affective values for faces is expressed in amygdala and fusiform gyrus. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 3(2), 109-118.

Petrovic, P., Kalisch, R., Singer, T. & Dolan, R. J. (2008). Oxytocin attenuates affective evaluations of conditioned faces and amygdala activity. Journal of Neuroscience, 28(26), 6607-6615.

Silani, G., Bird, G., Brindley, R., Singer, T., Frith, C. & Frith, U. (2008). Levels of emotional awareness and autism: An fMRI study. Social Neuroscience, 3(2), 97-112.

Singer, T. (2008). Understanding others: Brain mechanisms of theory of mind and empathy. In P. W. Glimcher, C. F. Camerer, E. Fehr & R. A. Poldrack (Eds.), Neuroeconomics: Decision making and the brain (pp. 233-250). Amsterdam: Elsevier.

Singer, T., Snozzi, R., Bird, G., Petrovic, P., Silani, G., Heinrichs, M. & Dolan, R. J. (2008). Effects of oxytocin and prosocial behavior on brain responses to direct and vicariously experienced pain. Emotion, 8(6), 781-791.

Seymour, B., Daw, N., Dayan, P., Singer, T. & Dolan, R. (2007). Differential encoding of losses and gains in the human striatum. Journal of Neuroscience, 27(18), 4826-4831.

Seymour, B., Singer, T. & Dolan, R. (2007). The neurobiology of punishment. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 8(4), 300-311.

Singer, T. (2007). The neuronal basis of empathy and fairness. In Novartis Foundation (Ed.),G. R. Bock & J. A. Goode (Eds.), Empathy and fairness. Symposium on empathy and fairness, held at the Novartis Foundation, London, 25.-27. October 2005 (pp. 20-30). Chichester: Wiley.

de Vignemont, F. & Singer, T. (2006). The empathic brain: how, when and why? Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 10(10), 435-441.

Harrison, N. A., Singer, T., Rotshtein, P., Dolan, R. J. & Critchley, H. D. (2006). Pupillary contagion: Central mechanisms engaged in sadness processing. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 1(1), 5-17.

Singer, T.T. & Deusinger, I. M. (2006). Körperliche Beeinträchtigung und "psychische Gesundheit" - untersucht an Patienten mit Skoliose. In G. Huppmann & S. Fischbeck (Hrsg.), Zur Geschichte der Medizinischen Psychologie (S. 195-209). Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.

Singer, T. (2006). The neuronal basis and ontogeny of empathy and mind reading: Review of literature and implications for future research. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 30(6), 855-863.

Singer, T. & Frith, C. D. (2006). The emergence of the "social" in cognitive neuroscience: The study of interacting brains. In P. A. M. von Lange (Ed.), Bridging social psychology: Benefits of transdisciplinary approaches (pp. 97-102). Mahwah: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Singer, T., Seymour, B., O'Doherty, J. P., Stephan, K. E., Dolan, R. J. & Frith, C. D. (2006). Empathic neural responses are modulated by the perceived fairness of others. Nature, 439(7075), 466-469.

Singer, T. & Fehr, E. (2005). The neuroeconomics of mind reading and empathy. American Economic Review, 95(2), 340-345.

Singer, T. & Frith, C. (2005). The painful side of empathy. Nature Neuroscience, 8(7), 845-846.

Singer, T., Kiebel, S. J., Winston, J. S., Dolan, R. J. & Frith, C. D. (2004). Brain responses to the acquired moral status of faces. Neuron, 41(4), 653-662.

Singer, T. & Kraft, U. (2004). Zum Mitfühlen geboren. Gehirn & Geist, 4, 32-37.

Singer, T., Seymour, B., O'Doherty, J., Kaube, H., Dolan, R. J. & Frith, C. D. (2004). Empathy for pain involves the affective but not sensory components of pain. Science, 303(5661), 1157-1162.

Singer, T., Wolpert, D. & Frith, C. D. (2004). Introduction: The study of social interactions. In C. D. Frith & D. Wolpert (Eds.), The neuroscience of social interaction: Decoding, imitating, and influencing the actions of others (pp. XIII-XXVII). Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Singer, T., Lindenberger, U. & Baltes, P. B. (2003). Plasticity of memory for new learning in very old age: A story of major loss? Psychology and Aging, 18(2), 306-317.

Singer, T., Verhaeghen, P., Ghisletta, P., Lindenberger, U. & Baltes, P. B. (2003). The fate of cognition in very old age: Six-year longitudinal findings in the Berlin Aging Study (BASE). Psychology and Aging, 18(2), 318-331.

Lindenberger, U., Singer, T. & Baltes, P. B. (2002). Longitudinal selectivity in aging populations: Separating mortality-associated versus experimental components in the Berlin Aging Study (BASE). Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 57(6), P474-P482.

Baltes, P. B. & Singer, T. (2001). Plasticity and the ageing mind: An exemplar of the bio-cultural orchestration of brain and behavior. European Review, 9(1), 59-76.

Heckhausen, J. & Singer, T. (2001). Plasticity in human behavior across the lifespan. In N. J. Smelser & P. B. Baltes (Eds.), International encyclopedia of the social and behavioral sciences (pp. 11497-11501). Oxford: Elsevier Science.

Singer, T. (2000). Testing-the-limits in einer mnemonischen Fähigkeit: Eine Studie zur kognitiven Plastizität im hohen Alter. Dissertation, Freie Universität, Fachbereich Erziehungswissenschaften, Psychologie und Sportwissenschaft, Berlin.

Singer, T. & Lindenberger, U. (2000). Plastizität. In H.-W. Wahl & C. Tesch-Römer (Hrsg.), Angewandte Gerontologie in Schlüsselbegriffen (S. 39-43). Stuttgart: Kohlhammer.

weitere Schriften:

Klimecki, O. M. & Singer, T. Compassion (In press). In A. W. T. & M. Lieberman (Eds.), Brain mapping: An encyclopedic reference. San Diego: Elsevier.



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