Social intelligence mediates the protective role of resting-state brain activity in the social cognition network against social anxiety.
Yingqiao MaYuhan ZouXiqin LiuTaolin ChenGraham J KempQi-Yong GongSong WangPublished in: Psychoradiology (2024)
These results indicate that resting-state activities in the social cognition networks might influence a person's social anxiety via social intelligence: lower left SFG activity → higher social intelligence → lower social anxiety. These may have implication for developing neurobehavioral interventions to mitigate social anxiety.