Research Topics
| Raymond A MarSummaryAffiliation: York University Country: Canada Publications
| Collaborators |
Detail Information
Publications
How daydreaming relates to life satisfaction, loneliness, and social support: the importance of gender and daydream contentRaymond A Mar
Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada
Conscious Cogn 21:401-7. 2012..Individual differences and the content of daydreams are thus important to consider when examining how happiness relates to spontaneous thoughts...
The neural bases of social cognition and story comprehensionRaymond A Mar
Department of Psychology, York University, Toronto M3J 1P3 Canada
Annu Rev Psychol 62:103-34. 2011..Story processing overlapped with many regions of the core mentalizing network, and these shared regions bear some resemblance to a network implicated by a number of other processes...
Literary arts and the development of the life storyRaymond A Mar
York University, Toronto, Canada
New Dir Child Adolesc Dev 2011:73-84. 2011..Taking a critical look at both theoretical proposals along with the current empirical research, they provide a brief survey of this intriguing hypothesis...
Emotion and narrative fiction: Interactive influences before, during, and after readingRaymond A Mar
York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Cogn Emot 25:818-33. 2011..With this, we can begin to sketch the outlines of what remains to be discovered...
Detecting agency from the biological motion of veridical vs animated agentsRaymond A Mar
York University, Department of Psychology, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci 2:199-205. 2007..In addition, the response in lateral temporal areas was observed in the absence of instructions to make mental inferences, thus demonstrating the spontaneous implementation of the intentional stance...
Common and unique neural correlates of autobiographical memory and theory of mindJennifer S Rabin
York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
J Cogn Neurosci 22:1095-111. 2010..Furthermore, the right TPJ and related lateral regions, and not the hippocampus, may be needed for ToM, given that this ability is intact in amnesic people...
