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Shared Representations
Sensorimotor Foundations of Social Life

A collection of cutting-edge contributions on the idea of shared representations - information sharing between the brains of those involved.

Sukhvinder S. Obhi (Edited by), Emily S. Cross (Edited by)

9781107050204, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 17 November 2016

712 pages, 72 b/w illus. 37 colour illus. 3 tables
23.6 x 15.7 x 3.6 cm, 1.23 kg

'Understanding how the brains of two persons in interaction influence each other and represent the world around them is a thrilling challenge that neuroscience is currently tackling. This book will tell you everything you need to know about this topic, from the neural representation of simple motor actions to the human ability to learn by observing others.' Gayannee Kedia, University of Graz, Austria

Socially situated thought and behaviour are pervasive and vitally important in human society. The social brain has become a focus of study for researchers in the neurosciences, psychology, biology and other areas of behavioural science, and it is becoming increasingly clear that social behaviour is heavily dependent on shared representations. Any social activity, from a simple conversation to a well-drilled military exercise to an exquisitely perfected dance routine, involves information sharing between the brains of those involved. This volume comprises a collection of cutting-edge essays centred on the idea of shared representations, broadly defined. Featuring contributions from established world leaders in their fields and written in a simultaneously accessible and detailed style, this is an invaluable resource for established researchers and those who are new to the field.

Part I. Foundations: 1. What it takes to share a task: sharing versus shaping task representations Thomas Dolk and Wolfgang Prinz
2. Merged minds: integration of bottom-up and top-down processes for social interactions Krista Grigaityte and Marco Iacoboni
3. A new view of the motor cortex and its relation to social behaviour Michael S. A. Graziano
4. Beyond action: shared representations in non-motor domains Michel-Pierre Coll and Philip L. Jackson
5. Cognisance of the neuroimaging methods for studying the social brain Stephanie Cacioppo and John T. Cacioppo
Part II. Imitation and Mimicry: 6. The comparative study of imitation mechanisms in non-human primates Francys Subiaul, Elizabeth Renner and Edward Krajkowksi
7. The cultural transmission of social information Janine Oostenbroek and Harriet Over
8. The control of shared representations and social cognition Lara Bardi and Marcel Brass
9. Neurocognitive explorations of social mimicry Sukhvinder S. Obhi
Part III. Thinking, Perceiving and Acting with Others: 10. Levels of complexity and the duality of gaze: how social attention changes from lab to life K. E. W. Laidlaw, E. F. Risko and A. Kingstone
11. Acting together: representations and coordination processes Cordula Vesper and Natalie Sebanz
12. Joint perception Jorina H. von Zimmermann and Daniel C. Richardson
13. Social antecedents and consequences of behavioural synchrony Daniël Lakens, Thomas Schubert and Maria-Paola Paladino
14. Musical ensemble performance: representing self, other, and joint action outcomes Peter E. Keller, Giacomo Novembre and Janeen Loehr
Part IV. Understanding Others: 15. The social function of the human mirror system: a motor chauvinist view Antonia Hamilton
16. Biological tuning of mirror mechanisms: evidence and functional implications Clare Press
17. Representation of self vs others' actions John A. Dewey and Günther Knoblich
18. Reading intention in action Caterina Ansuini, Andrea Cavallo, Cesare Bertone and Christina Becchio
19. Complementary actions Luisa Sartori
20. Emotional convergence: a case of contagion? Guillaume Dezacache, Terry Eskenazi and Julie Grèzes
Part V. Learning and Development: 21. Shared interoceptive representations: the case of alexithymia Rebecca Brewer, Richard Cook and Geoffrey Bird
22. Mirror neuron formation via associative learning Caroline Catmur
23. Disorders of shared representations Jennifer Cook
24. Learning by diffusion: using diffusion experiments and social network analysis to understand the dynamics of cultural evolution Cameron R. Turner and Emma Flynn
25. Observational motor learning Heather McGregor and Paul L. Gribble
26. The impact of action expertise on shared representations Emily S. Cross and Beatriz Calvo-Merino
Part VI. Shared Representations in Applied Contexts: 27. Sport performance: motor expertise and observational learning in sport Cosimo Urgesi and Stergios Makris
28. Shared mental models in sport and refereeing Dave Collins and Andy Hill
29. Musical synchronisation, social interaction, and the brain Kristina Waclawik, Sarah Watson and Jessica A. Grahn
30. You move, I watch, it matters: aesthetic communication in dance Guido Orgs, Dana Caspersen and Patrick Haggard.

Subject Areas: Neurosciences [PSAN], Cognition & cognitive psychology [JMR], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH], Psychology [JM]

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