The Cerebellar Role in Emotions at a Turning Point: Bibliometric Analysis and Collaboration Networks
Dianela A. Osorio-Becerra, Egidio D’Angelo, Claudia Casellato

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the growing scientific interest in the cerebellum's role in emotions, showing exponential growth and interdisciplinary collaboration trends.
Contribution
The study provides a comprehensive bibliometric analysis of cerebellar emotion research, highlighting trends and collaboration networks.
Findings
The field has seen exponential growth in publications, researchers, and funding sources.
Collaboration is increasing, though small teams still dominate over large, multicenter projects.
Research focuses on neurological and affective disorders, primarily in humans and rodent models.
Abstract
The neural basis of emotional experience, both in neurotypical and clinical conditions, remains an open research topic. Historically, the cerebellum was considered a purely motor structure; however, studies since the mid-twentieth century and contributions like the cerebellar cognitive-affective syndrome, evidenced its role in emotion. This has led to an expansion of the paradigm, encouraging further research into the cerebellar role in emotion. Understanding this field's development is essential to assessing its current state, identifying knowledge gaps, and exploring emerging areas. This paper analyzes the evolution of scientific production, addressing how scientific interest has changed over time, factors driving growth, dominant topics, leading figures, and collaboration networks. This analysis identifies trends and opportunities, guiding strategies and advancing knowledge through a…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsVestibular and auditory disorders · Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases · Ion channel regulation and function
