Conceptual Challenges and Directions for Social Neuroscience
Neuron, Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 752-767
By Ralph Adolphs
Social neuroscience has been enormously successful and is making major
contributions to fields ranging from psychiatry to economics. Yet deep
and interesting conceptual challenges abound. Is social information
processing domain specific? Is it universal or susceptible to
individual differences and effects of culture? Are there uniquely human social cognitive abilities? What is the “social brain,”
and how do we map social psychological processes onto it? Animal models
together with fMRI and other cognitive neuroscience approaches in humans
are providing an unprecedented level of detail and many surprising
results. It may well be that social neuroscience in the near future
will give us an entirely new view of who we are, how we evolved, and
what might be in store for the future of our species.
Read the article.