Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1624363100> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1624363100 endingPage "1287" @default.
- W1624363100 startingPage "1266" @default.
- W1624363100 abstract "One fundamental question in psychology is what makes humans such intensely social beings. Probing the developmental and neural origins of our social capacities is a way of addressing this question. In the last 10 years the field of social-cognitive development has witnessed a surge in studies using neuroscience methods to elucidate the development of social information processing during infancy. While the use of electroencephalography (EEG)/event-related brain potentials (ERPs) and functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) has revealed a great deal about the timing and localization of the cortical processes involved in early social cognition, the principles underpinning the early development of social brain functioning remain largely unexplored. Here I provide a framework that delineates the essential processes implicated in the early development of the social brain. In particular, I argue that the development of social brain functions in infancy is characterized by the following key principles: (a) self-relevance, (b) joint engagement, (c) predictability, (d) categorization, (e) discrimination, and (f) integration. For all of the proposed principles, I provide empirical examples to illustrate when in infancy they emerge. Moreover, I discuss to what extent they are in fact specifically social in nature or share properties with more domain-general developmental principles. Taken together, this article provides a conceptual integration of the existing EEG/ERPs and fNIRS work on infant social brain function and thereby offers the basis for a principle-based approach to studying the neural correlates of early social cognition." @default.
- W1624363100 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1624363100 creator A5069386611 @default.
- W1624363100 date "2015-01-01" @default.
- W1624363100 modified "2023-10-01" @default.
- W1624363100 title "The development of social brain functions in infancy." @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1480711868 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1494996288 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1500891748 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1511448892 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1530546319 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1545077353 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1577328767 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1587461800 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1604879017 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1634923683 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W163941254 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1747101780 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1908858510 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1926585113 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1964829672 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1965008419 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1965543622 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1968048563 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1968372229 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1968732298 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1970528677 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1971796999 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1971871626 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1973765746 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1975418600 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1979486681 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1980446013 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1983056014 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1983111444 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1984155872 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1985898429 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1985908229 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1988747931 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1992007613 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1994585255 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1996068081 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1996834890 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1996993623 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1997927507 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1998232865 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W1999072070 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2000917789 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2001319329 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2005311247 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2005793188 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2007462506 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2008065461 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2008290809 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2009794136 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2010229186 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2010768574 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2010885943 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2012758188 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2016128925 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2017161938 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2020546074 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2020632593 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2020926765 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2020944885 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2026715744 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2031305769 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2034175465 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2036788448 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2036823828 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2037316381 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2038199522 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2039231176 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2043985951 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2044636785 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2047485285 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2051165680 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2051362056 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2052412604 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2052581843 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2052610531 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2054951946 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2055031862 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2055614187 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2060618445 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2061150508 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2061198334 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2062317428 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2064372354 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2065364824 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2067630609 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2069347871 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2071218886 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2073227393 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2073794694 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2075139428 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2076975861 @default.
- W1624363100 cites W2077081354 @default.