Toward a second-person neuroscience.
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Citations
Investigation of the neural correlates of mentalizing through the Dynamic Inference Task, a new naturalistic task of social cognition.
Distinguishing minds in interaction: Modeling self-other distinction in the motor system
Gestalt structures in multi-person intersubjectivity
Joy Hirsch: Brain-to-Brain
References
Mind in Society: The Development of Higher Psychological Processes
Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community
The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception
The psychology of interpersonal relations
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Frequently Asked Questions (2)
Q2. What future works have the authors mentioned in the paper "Toward a second-person neuroscience" ?
Finally, the authors address how insights from a second-person account could be put to use in future research using computational neuroscience techniques and in the emerging field of social neuroendocrinology ( see section 4. 3 ). Concerning the second type of studies, the authors suggest that using the established possibility of exploring joint attention in the scanner may help to understand the neural underpinnings of other ( possibly more explicit ) social cognitive tasks: Overall, the next section, therefore, serves to consider potential new avenues that research might take by embracing a second-person approach. Basically the authors see three options to address this within the context of measuring a single brain: ( a ) studies contrasting the information one can obtain when being in interaction with versus observing someone ( learning studies ) ; ( b ) studies contrasting the effects of being in interaction with versus observing someone on subsequent judgments and behavior ( priming studies ) ; ( c ) studies that establish whether they are susceptible to different contextual influences when they are interacting versus observing.