Social Neuroscience: Key ReadingsJohn T. Cacioppo, Gary G. Berntson Psychology Press, 2005 - 296 páginas Neuroscientists and cognitive scientists have collaborated for more than a decade with the common goal of understanding how the mind works. These collaborations have helped unravel puzzles of the mind, including aspects of perception, imagery, attention, and memory. Many aspects of the mind, however, require a more comprehensive approach to reveal the mystery of mind-brain connections. Attraction, altruism, speech recognition, affiliation, attachment, attitudes, identification, kin recognition, cooperation, competition, empathy, sexuality, communication, dominance, persuasion, obedience, morality, contagion, nurturance, violence, and person memory are just a few. Through classic and contemporary articles and reviews, Social Neuroscience: Key Readings illustrates the complementary nature of social, cognitive, and biological levels of analysis and how research integrating these levels can foster more comprehensive theories of the mechanisms underlying complex behavior and the mind. |
Conteúdo
Volume Overview Analyses of the Social Brain through the Lens of Human Brain Imaging | 1 |
The Brain Determines Social Behavior The Story of Phineas Gage | 19 |
The Return of Phineas Gage Clues about the Brain from the Skull of a Famous Patient | 21 |
Impairment of Social and Moral Behavior Related to Early Damage in Human Prefrontal Cortex | 29 |
Dissociable Systems for Attention Emotion and Social Knowledge | 41 |
Dissociable Prefrontal Brain Systems for Attention and Emotion | 43 |
Distinct Neural Systems Subserve Person and Object Knowledge | 53 |
Functional Networks in Emotional Moral and Nonmoral Social Judgments | 63 |
Animacy Causality and Theory of Mind | 153 |
Movement and Mind A Functional Imaging Study of Perception and Interpretation of Complex Intentional Movement Patterns | 155 |
People Thinking about Thinking People The Role of the TemporoParietal Junction in Theory of Mind | 171 |
Social Perception and Cognition Multiple Routes | 183 |
Neural Correlates of the Automatic Processing of Threat Facial Signals | 185 |
Automatic and Intentional Brain Responses during Evaluation of Trustworthiness of Faces | 199 |
Decision Making | 211 |
The Neural Basis of Economic DecisionMaking in the Ultimatum Game | 215 |
Dissociable Systems for Face and Object Processing | 73 |
Stages of Processing in Face Perception Study An MEG Study | 75 |
Distributed and Overlapping Representations of Faces and Objects in Ventral Temporal Cortex | 87 |
Dissociable Systems for the Perception of Biological Movement | 97 |
Brain Areas Active during Visual Perception of Biological Motion | 101 |
Electrophysiology and Brain Imaging of Biological Motion | 115 |
Biological Movement From Perception to Imitation to Emotion | 131 |
Action Observation Activates Premotor and Parietal Areas in a Somatotopic Manner An fMRI Study | 133 |
Neural Mechanisms of Empathy in Humans A Relay from Neural Systems for Imitation to Limbic Areas | 143 |
Exploring the Neurological Substrate of Emotional and Social Intelligence | 223 |
Biological Does Not Mean Predetermined Reciprocal Influences of Social and Biological Processes | 239 |
Social Dominance in Monkeys Dopamine D₂ Receptors and Cocaine SelfAdministration | 243 |
Rethinking Feelings An fMRI Study of the Cognitive Regulation of Emotion | 253 |
How to Read a Journal Article in Social Psychology | 271 |
281 | |
289 | |