Review
Nature Reviews Neuroscience 4, 165-178 (March 2003) | doi:10.1038/nrn1056
Focus on: Cognitive Neuroscience
Cognitive neuroscience of human social behaviour
Ralph Adolphs1 About the author
Abstract
We are an intensely social species — it has been argued that our social nature defines what makes us human, what makes us conscious or what gave us our large brains. As a new field, the social brain sciences are probing the neural underpinnings of social behaviour and have produced a banquet of data that are both tantalizing and deeply puzzling. We are finding new links between emotion and reason, between action and perception, and between representations of other people and ourselves. No less important are the links that are also being established across disciplines to understand social behaviour, as neuroscientists, social psychologists, anthropologists, ethologists and philosophers forge new collaborations.
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Author affiliations
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Deparment of Neurology, University of Iowa, 200 Hawkins Drive, Iowa City, Iowa 52242, USA.
Email: ralph-adolphs@uiowa.edu
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