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      Loving-kindness brings loving-kindness: the impact of Buddhism on cognitive self-other integration.

      Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
      Adult, Buddhism, psychology, Female, Humans, Interpersonal Relations, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Self Concept, Social Perception, Taiwan, ethnology, Visual Perception, physiology, Young Adult

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          Abstract

          Common wisdom has it that Buddhism enhances compassion and self-other integration. We put this assumption to empirical test by comparing practicing Taiwanese Buddhists with well-matched atheists. Buddhists showed more evidence of self-other integration in the social Simon task, which assesses the degree to which people co-represent the actions of a coactor. This suggests that self-other integration and task co-representation vary as a function of religious practice.

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