The Social Brain: Neural Basis of Social Knowledge
California Institute of Technology
Abstract
Social cognition in humans is distinguished by psychological processes that allow us to make inferences about what is going on inside other people-their intentions, feelings, and thoughts. Some of these processes likely account for aspects of human social behavior that are unique, such as our culture and civilization. Most schemes divide social information processing into those processes that are relatively automatic and driven by the stimuli, versus those that are more deliberative and controlled, and sensitive to context and strategy. These distinctions are reflected in the neural structures that underlie social cognition, where there is a recent wealth of data primarily from functional neuroimaging. Here I…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.73
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 194
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Social cognition
- Cognition
- Social neuroscience
- Feeling
- Cognitive science
- Cognitive psychology
- Context (archaeology)