The Neuroscience of Social Interaction
Chris Frith(Author)
Oxford University Press
Published on 1. February 2004
Book
Hardback
358 pages
978-0-19-852925-5 (ISBN)
Description
Humans, like other primates, are intensely social creatures. One of the main functions of our brains is to enable us to be as skilful in social interactions as we are in our interactions with the physical world. Any differences between human brains and those of our nearest relatives, the great apes, are likely to be linked to our unique achievements in social interaction and communication rather than our motor or perceptual skills. Unique to humans is the ability to mentalise (or mind read), that is to perceive and communicate mental states, such as beliefs and desires. A key problem facing neuroscience is to uncover the biological mechanisms underlying our ability to read other minds and to show how these mechanisms evolved. To solve this problem we need to do experiments in which people (or animals) interact with one another rather than behaving in isolation. Such experiments are now being conducted in increasing numbers and many of the leading exponents of such experiments have contributed to this volume.
'The Neuroscience of Social Interactions' will be an important step in uncovering the biological mechanisms underlying social interactions - undoubtedly one of the major programmes for neuroscience in the twenty-first century.
'The Neuroscience of Social Interactions' will be an important step in uncovering the biological mechanisms underlying social interactions - undoubtedly one of the major programmes for neuroscience in the twenty-first century.
Reviews / Votes
With their book, Frith and Wolpert have made an important contribution to the nascent field of social neuroscience by precisely defining a specific subtopic and emphasizing different perspectives ... A decade from now there will most likely be a journal, society and annual meeting devoted to social neuroscience, but it is sill unclear how all of the research relevant to this topic will combine to form this new discipline. Organizing the extant literature on the neuroscience of social behaviour, as this volume has done, will help shape the growth of this emerging field. Nature Neuroscience, Vol 7, Number 9More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
numerous figures & halftones
ISBN-13
978-0-19-852925-5 (9780198529255)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Content
Introduction: the study of social interactions; BIOLOGICAL MOTION: DECODING SOCIAL SIGNALS; 1. Electrophysiology and brain imaging of biological motion; 2. Teleological and referential understanding of action in infancy; 3. Development and neurophysiology of mentalizing; 4. Mathematical modelling of animate and intentional motion; MIRROR NEURONS: IMITATING THE BEHAVIOUR OF OTHERS; 5. What imitation tells us about social cognition: a rapprochement between developmental psychology and cognitive neuroscience; 6. Action generation and action perception in imitation: an instance of the ideomotor principle; 7. The manifold nature of interpersonal relations: the quest for a common mechanism; 8. Imitation as behaviour parsing; 9. Computational approaches to motor learning by imitation; MENTALIZING: CLOSING THE COMMUNICATION LOOP; 10. Detecting agents; 11. Facial expressions, their communicatory functions and neuro-cognitive substrates; 12. Models of dyadic social interaction; 13. Dressing the mind properly for the game; 14. The unifying computational framework for motor control and social interaction