|
|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
This book seeks to build bridges between neuroscience and social
science empirical researchers and theorists working around the
world, integrating perspectives from both fields, separating real
from spurious divides between them and delineating new challenges
for future investigation. Since its inception in the early 2000s,
multilevel social neuroscience has dramatically reshaped our
understanding of the affective and cultural dimensions of
neurocognition. Thanks to its explanatory pluralism, this field has
moved beyond long standing dichotomies and reductionisms, offering
a neurobiological perspective on topics classically monopolized by
non-scientific traditions, such as consciousness, subjectivity, and
intersubjectivity. Moreover, it has forged new paths for dialogue
with disciplines which directly address societal dynamics, such as
economics, law, education, public policy making and sociology. At
the same time, beyond internal changes in the field of
neuroscience, new problems emerge in the dialogue with other
disciplines. Neuroscience and Social Science - The Missing Link
puts together contributions by experts interested in the
convergences, divergences, and controversies across these fields.
The volume presents empirical studies on the interplay between
relevant levels of inquiry (neural, psychological, social),
chapters rooted in specific scholarly traditions (neuroscience,
sociology, philosophy of science, public policy making), as well as
proposals of new theoretical foundations to enhance the
rapprochement in question. By putting neuroscientists and social
scientists face to face, the book promotes new reflections on this
much needed marriage while opening opportunities for social
neuroscience to plunge from the laboratory into the core of social
life. This transdisciplinary approach makes Neuroscience and Social
Science - The Missing Link an important resource for students,
teachers, and researchers interested in the social dimension of
human mind working in different fields, such as social
neuroscience, social sciences, cognitive science, psychology,
behavioral science, linguistics, and philosophy.
This Handbook introduces neurosemiotics, a pluralistic framework to
reconsider semiosis as an emergent phenomenon at the interface of
biology and culture. Across individual and interpersonal settings,
meaning is influenced by external and internal processes bridging
phenomenological and biological dimensions. Yet, each of these
dyads has been segregated into discipline-specific topics, with
attempts to chart their intersections proving preliminary at best.
Bringing together perspectives from world-leading experts, this
volume seeks to overcome these disciplinary divides between the
social and the natural sciences at both the empirical and
theoretical levels. Its various chapters chart the foundations of
neurosemiotics; characterize linguistic and interpersonal dynamics
as shaped by neurocognitive, bodily, situational, and societal
factors; and examine other daily neurosemiotic occurrences driven
by faces, music, tools, and even visceral signals. This
comprehensive volume is a state-of the-art resource for students
and researchers interested in how humans and other animals construe
experience in such fields as cognitive neuroscience, biosemiotics,
philosophy of mind, neuropsychology, neurolinguistics, and
evolutionary biology.
This Brief introduces two empirically grounded models of situated
mental phenomena: contextual social cognition (the collection of
psychological processes underlying context-dependent social
behavior) and action-language coupling (the integration of ongoing
actions with movement-related verbal information). It combines
behavioral, neuroscientific, and neuropsychiatric perspectives to
forge a novel view of contextual influences on active, multi-domain
processes. Chapters highlight the models' translational potential
for the clinical field by focusing on diseases compromising social
cognition (mainly illustrated by behavioral variant frontotemporal
dementia) and motor skills (crucially, Parkinson's disease). A
final chapter sets forth metatheoretical considerations regarding
intercognition, the constant binding of processes triggered by
environmental and body-internal sources, which confers a sensus
communis to our experience. In addition, the book includes two
commentaries written by external peers pondering on advantages and
limits of the proposal. Contextual Cognition will be of interest to
students, teachers, and researchers from the fields of cognitive
science, neurology, psychiatry, neuroscience, psychology,
behavioral science, linguistics, and philosophy.
|
You may like...
Charles II
Jacob Abbott
Hardcover
R493
Discovery Miles 4 930
Carry Me Home
Jessica Therrien
Hardcover
R751
Discovery Miles 7 510
Directing Change
APM Governance Specific Interest Group
Paperback
R381
Discovery Miles 3 810
|