I. Introduction
1. A Brief Overview of Social Neuroscience, Eddie Harmon-Jones and Piotr Winkielman
II. Emotion Processes
2. The Importance of Emotion–Social Cognition Interactions for Social Functioning: Insights from Orbitofrontal Cortex, Jennifer S. Beer
3. Neurobiology of Emotion Recognition: Current Evidence for Shared Substrates, Andrea S. Heberlein and Ralph Adolphs
4. Ten Years of Research with the Trier Social Stress Test—Revisited, Brigitte M. Kudielka, Dirk H. Hellhammer, and Clemens Kirschbaum
5. I Know How You Feel: Social and Emotional Information Processing in the Brain, Catherine J. Norris and John T. Cacioppo
6. How Thinking Controls Feeling: A Social Cognitive Neuroscience Approach, Kevin N. Ochsner
III. Motivation Processes
7. Asymmetrical Frontal Cortical Activity, Affective Valence, and Motivational Direction, Eddie Harmon-Jones
8. Reward: Neural Circuitry for Social Valuation, Brian Knutson and G. Elliott Wimmer
9. A Biobehavioral Model of Implicit Power Motivation Arousal, Reward, and Frustration, Oliver C. Schultheiss
10. Vigilant and Avoidant Responses to Angry Facial Expressions: Dominance and Submission Motives, Jack van Honk and Dennis J. L. G. Schutter
IV. Attitudes and Social Cognition
11. Attitudes and Evaluation: Toward a Component Process Framework, William A. Cunningham and Marcia K. Johnson
12. A Social Cognitive Neuroscience Model of Human Empathy, Jean Decety
13.How Dynamics of Thinking Create Affective and Cognitive Feelings: Psychology and Neuroscience of the Connection between Fluency, Liking, and Memory, Tedra A. Fazendeiro, Troy Chenier, and Piotr Winkielman
14. The X- and C-Systems: The Neural Basis of Automatic and Controlled Social Cognition, Matthew D. Lieberman
15. An Evolutionary Perspective on Domain Specificity in Social Intelligence, Valerie E. Stone
V. Person Perception, Stereotyping, and Prejudice
16. Mechanisms for the Regulation of Intergroup Responses: Insights from a Social Neuroscience Approach, David M. Amodio, Patricia G. Devine, and Eddie Harmon-Jones
17. Social Cognitive Neuroscience of Person Perception: A Selective Review Focused on the Event-Related Brain Potential, Bruce D. Bartholow and Cheryl L. Dickter
18. Social Neuroscience and Social Perception: New Perspectives on Categorization, Prejudice, and Stereotyping, Tiffany A. Ito, Eve Willadsen-Jensen, and Joshua Correll
VI. Interpersonal Relationships
19. Neuropeptides and the Protective Effects of Social Bonds, C. Sue Carter
20. The Quiet Revolution of Existential Neuroscience, Marco Iacoboni
21. Affiliative Responses to Stress: A Social Neuroscience Model, Shelley E. Taylor and Gian C. Gonzaga
22. The Social Neuroscience of Relationships: An Examination of Health-Relevant Pathways, Bert N. Uchino, Julianne Holt-Lunstad, Darcy Uno, Rebecca Campo, and Maija Reblin
Eddie Harmon-Jones, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Psychology
at Texas A&M University. Dr. Harmon-Jones’s current research
focuses on emotions and motivations, their implications for social
processes and behaviors, and their underlying neural circuits. His
research has been supported by the National Institute of Mental
Health, the National Science Foundation, and the Fetzer Institute.
In 1999 he coedited Cognitive Dissonance: Progress on a Pivotal
Theory in Social Psychology. In 2002 he received the Distinguished
Award for an Early Career Contribution to Psychophysiology from the
Society for Psychophysiological Research. In 2003 Dr. Harmon-Jones
coedited a special issue devoted to social neuroscience for the
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. He has also served as
an associate editor of the Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology and is on the editorial boards of four other
journals.
Piotr Winkielman, PhD, is an Associate Professor of Psychology at
the University of California, San Diego. Dr. Winkielman’s current
research focuses on the relation between emotion, cognition, body,
and consciousness using psychological and psychophysiological
approaches. His research has been supported by the National Science
Foundation and the National Alliance for Autism Research. He has
served on the editorial boards of the Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology and Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin,
and is currently Associate Editor of Emotion. In 2005 Dr.
Winkielman coedited Emotion and Consciousness.
The past decade has witnessed great progress in identifying the
physiological and neural mechanisms underlying social behavior.
This volume brings together many of the leaders of the nascent
field of social neuroscience to describe their groundbreaking work
in this area. The editors have done a superb job of assembling a
broad and representative slate of state-of-the-art chapters. This
volume will be valuable for the increasing number of advanced
undergraduate and graduate courses focusing on the neurobiology of
social behavior, as well as for social and personality
psychologists seeking an excellent introduction to the area. Highly
recommended.--Todd F. Heatherton, PhD, Champion International
Professor, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences,
Dartmouth College For students unfamiliar with the field, Social
Neuroscience provides an accessible overview of the major topics of
study and makes a strong case for the need for more research on the
physiological and neurological bases of social behavior. In the
classroom, this book would be beneficial to advanced undergraduates
or graduate students interested in either social psychology or
cognitive/behavioral neuroscience.--Sarah Wood, PhD, Department of
Psychology, University of Wisconsin-StoutJames Watson once said,
'there are only molecules; everything else is sociology.' His
tongue-in-cheek arrogance reminds us of the great gulf that once
separated the 'two cultures' of humanities and science. In the last
decade this gap is successfully being bridged by social
neuroscience. This fine edited volume presents a readable,
comprehensive overview of this exciting new field.--V. S.
Ramachandran, MD, PhD, Center for Brain and Cognition, University
of California, San Diego
Human beings are intensely social animals, yet intensive study of
the biological basis of human social behavior began only quite
recently. Brain imaging was the spur to this acceleration of social
neuroscience research, but brain imaging alone can never reveal the
neural mechanisms underlying human social interactions. Recognizing
this shortcoming, Harmon-Jones and Winkielman include a whole range
of additional and complementary methodologies in this book, from
lesions to hormone analysis. This is an excellent introduction to
cutting-edge research in what is undoubtedly going to be the
dominant theme in 21st-century neuroscience.--Chris Frith, FRS,
Institute of Neurology, University College London, UK
More than a half-century ago, social psychology opened a New Look
in perception. Social phenomena occurring below awareness became
prime subjects of controversial discourse. Social Neuroscience now
demonstrates that, in many cases, what we thought were no more than
conjectures have become promising lines of discovery. It organizes
in a clear, instructive manner most of what we now know about
neural processes underlying significant aspects of social
behavior.--Robert Zajonc, PhD, Department of Psychology, Stanford
University
Not long ago, social motivation was a matter of others sharing some
of their food, warmth, and some sex. Now, with the affect
revolution, social motivation has become a cauldron of basic
emotional systems and cognitive abilities and desires. This volume
summarizes a host of exciting developments in this rapidly emerging
field. It brings us up to date with exciting research programs that
are illuminating the multidimensional social-affective nature of
our existence. We finally have a secure intellectual base from
which to launch the next generation of inquiries that will allow us
to blend human and animal research into an enlightened and unified
understanding of how social brains and social mind make us the
kinds of creatures that we are.--Jaak Panksepp, PhD, Department of
Veterinary and Comparative Anatomy, Pharmacology, and Physiology,
Washington State University
- Harmon-Jones and Winkielman include essential psychological
topics such as motivation, person perception, emotion, attitudes,
prejudice and stereotyping, and interpersonal relationships....An
accessible, readable, and comprehensive overview of an exciting,
emerging new field. --Keeping In Touch, 11/17/2007ƒƒ Conveys
neuroscientific analyses of social behavior through clear and
focused prose, at an appropriate level of complexity for its
readership....This volume easily accomplishes one of its primary
aims: to introduce a wide audience to the basic concepts and
methods of social neuroscience....A thoughtful collection of
wide-ranging and fascinating articles. --PsycCRITIQUES,
11/17/2007ƒƒ Through a showcase of the latest research programs,
and leading investigations, this volume presents its audience with
an accessible, readable, and comprehensive overview of an exciting,
emerging new field. --EABP Newsletter, 9/26/2010
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