BookJean Decety, Yves Christen, editors.
Summary: Traditionally, neuroscience has considered the nervous system as an isolated entity and largely ignored influences of the social environments in which humans and many animal species live. However, there is mounting evidence that the social environment affects behavior across species, from microbes to humans. This book brings together scholars who work with animal and human models of social behavior to discuss the challenges and opportunities in this interdisciplinary academic field.
Contents:
Preface
Robin Dunbar: What's so social about the social brain?
Steve Rogers: The neurobiology of a transformation from asocial to social life during swarm formation in desert locusts
Jakob Bro-Jorgensen: Social neuroscience and the study of animal communication.- Jay J. van Bavel et al.: The group mind: the pervasive influence of social identity on cognition
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy: Development and social selection in the emergence of "emotionally modern" humans
Mark van Vugt: On faces, gazes, votes, and followers: evolutionary psychological and social neuroscience approaches to leadership
Craig Ferris: Using awake animal imaging to understand neural circuits of emotion: studies ranging from maternal care to aggression
Jean Decety: The neuro-evolution of empathy and caring for others: why it matters for morality.- Beatrice de Gelder and Ruud Hortensius: The many faces of the emotional body
Kiley J. Hamlin: The origins of human morality: complex socio-moral evaluations by preverbal infants
Ilanit Gordon: Can oxytocin improve core brain and behavioral features of Autism Spectrum Disorders in children?
Jack van Honk et al.: Testosterone and dominance in humans: behavioral and brain mechanisms
Subject index.