Special Issues of Social Neuroscience
Published Titles
Neural Correlates of Deception
A Special Issue of Social Neuroscience
By Giorgio Ganis, and Julian Keenan.
Deception, also known as "lying", is a pervasive and fundamental social behavior in which a person attempts to persuade another to accept as true what the deceiver believes to be untrue. Because of its essential role in our social life, it is important for social neuroscience to reveal the inner
Published December 2009 by Psychology Press
The Mirror Neuron System
A Special Issue of Social Neuroscience
By Christian Keysers, and Luciano Fadiga.
Mirror neurons are premotor neurons, originally discovered in the macaque brain , that discharge both during execution of goal-directed actions and during the observation of similar actions executed by another individual. They therefore ‘mirror’ others’ actions on the observer's motor repertoire.
Published November 2008 by Psychology Press
Interpersonal Sensitivity: Entering Others’ Worlds
A Special Issue of Social Neuroscience
By Jean Decety, and Dan Batson.
Interpersonal sensitivity refers to our ability to perceive and respond with care to the internal states of other people, understand the antecedents of those states, and predict the subsequent events that will result. Guest editors neuroscientist Jean Decety and social psychologist Dan Batson
Published September 2007 by Psychology Press
more information about Interpersonal Sensitivity: Entering Others’ Worlds
Theory of Mind
A Special Issue of Social Neuroscience
By Rebecca Saxe, and Simon Baron-Cohen.
Investigations of the neural basis of theory of mind - the ability to think about other people's thoughts - only recently became feasible; now, the number of such investigations and the sophistication of the results are accelerating dramatically. The articles in this special issue use a wide range
Published February 2007 by Psychology Press
Forthcoming Titles
Developmental Social Neuroscience
A Special Issue of Social Neuroscience
By Philip David Zelazo, and Tomas Paus.
This Special Issue showcases some of the latest and best research in an important emerging field, developmental social neuroscience, which is focussed on the nature and development of the neural mechanisms underlying socially relevant human behaviour. Recent work on the neural correlates of empathy
Published October 2010 by Psychology Press