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From social-signal detection to higher social cognition: an fMRI approach
2013
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
Implicit or automatic detection of social signals, which discriminate animate, intentional objects in the environment, is essential for higher social cognition and its development. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we identified the neural substrate of detecting simple visual social signals and examined its functional link with the mechanism of inferring anothers mental state. Healthy participants were presented with the eye-gaze shift (EG) and self-propelling motion (SP) under both
doi:10.1093/scan/nst119
pmid:23887806
pmcid:PMC4158369
fatcat:62uol6k32fgb5m3zcsoe7kw3ma