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Hi all, in this video I discuss the neuropsychological differences between social anxiety and paranoia. I hope you enjoy it! Intro music creds to Jayan Patel. Brainstorm festival discussed: https://thebrainstorms.io/festival?fb... 42% off brainstorm tickets: https://hopin.com/events/the-brainsto... Free tickets for less affluent students and professionals from low-income countries: https://forms.office.com/Pages/Respon... 0:00 Start 00:14 Brain storm festival 01:39 Intro to anxiety & paranoia 03:43 Similarities between them 04:28 Differences between them 05:04 Possible causes of paranoia; Perceptual abnormalities 05:56 Possible causes of paranoia; Trauma & stress 06:34 Possible causes of paranoia; Reasoning bias 07:12 Paranoia & groups- different with anxiety 07:52 The power of others 08:18 Social status & defence mechanisms 09:03 Brain differences in social anxiety vs paranoia intro 09:03 The amygdala & social anxiety 10:48 The amygdala & paranoia 11:05 Medial prefrontal cortex & paranoia 12:02 Medial prefrontal cortex & social anxiety 14:00 Summary Gilbert, P., Boxall, M., Cheung, M., & Irons, C. (2005). The relation of paranoid ideation and social anxiety in a mixed clinical population. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy, 12(2), 124-133. Freeman, D., Gittins, M., Pugh, K., Antley, A., Slater, M., & Dunn, G. (2008). What makes one person paranoid and another person anxious? The differential prediction of social anxiety and persecutory ideation in an experimental situation. Psychological Medicine, 38(8), 1121-1132. Lehrner, A., Daskalakis, N., & Yehuda, R. (2016). Cortisol and the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis in PTSD. Posttraumatic stress disorder. John Wiley & Sons, Inc, 265-290. Euston, D. R., Gruber, A. J., & McNaughton, B. L. (2012). The role of medial prefrontal cortex in memory and decision making. Neuron, 76(6), 1057-1070. Freeman, D., H. Startup, G. Dunn, E. Černis, G. Wingham, K. Pugh, J. Cordwell, H. Mander, and D. Kingdon. "Understanding jumping to conclusions in patients with persecutory delusions: working memory and intolerance of uncertainty." Psychological medicine (2014): 3017-3024. Goghari, Vina M., Scott R. Sponheim, and Angus W. MacDonald III. "The functional neuroanatomy of symptom dimensions in schizophrenia: a qualitative and quantitative review of a persistent question." Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 34, no. 3 (2010): 468-486. Gilbert, Paul, M. Boxall, M. Cheung, and C. Irons. "The relation of paranoid ideation and social anxiety in a mixed clinical population." Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy 12, no. 2 (2005): 124-133. Horton, Leslie E., Neus Barrantes-Vidal, Paul J. Silvia, and Thomas R. Kwapil. "Worries about being judged versus being harmed: Disentangling the association of social anxiety and paranoia with schizotypy." PloS one 9, no. 6 (2014): e96269.