832:
intentionality, Latvian Prof. Igor Val
Danilov expanded the use of the term shared intentionality to include consideration of the interaction between an embryo and her mother. From this perspective, abilities to process, store, and apply information about others develop from the prenatal period. This insight continues the reflections of great thinkers (e.g., Kant) and leading child development theorists (beginning from Montessori and Vygotsky) about the beginning of cognition in interactions with the environment. Based on experimental data from research on child behavior in the prenatal period, and advances in inter-brain neuroscience research, this neurophysiological hypothesis introduced the notion of non-local neuronal coupling of the mother and fetus neuronal networks. The notion of non-local neuronal coupling filled a gap in knowledge – both in the Core Knowledge Theory and the group of positions in Externalism – about the beginning of cognition, the gap that the binding problem has also shown. This insight also shed light on neurophysiological processes that underlie the human ability to process, store, and apply information about other people and social situations beginning from the reflexes stage of development, when even aware goal-directed behavior is questioned. While exactly due to the ability of shared intentionality, very young babies express social behavior. This ability manifests in recognizing and selectively responding to social stimuli. From this perspective, Social cognition contributes to cognitive development of newborns and even embryos when communication is still impossible. A development of the human ability to process, store, and apply information about others begins in the prenatal period.
660:. According to this view, social cognition is a level of analysis that aims to understand social psychological phenomena by investigating the cognitive processes that underlie them. The major concerns of the approach are the processes involved in the perception, judgment, and memory of social stimuli; the effects of social and affective factors on information processing; and the behavioral and interpersonal consequences of cognitive processes. This level of analysis may be applied to any content area within social psychology, including research on intrapersonal, interpersonal, intragroup, and intergroup processes.
913:. Whether a person will successfully regulate the application of the activated schemas is dependent on individual differences in self-regulatory ability and the presence of situational impairments to executive control. High self-regulatory ability and the lack of situational impairments on executive functioning increase the likelihood that individuals will successfully inhibit the influence of automatically activated schemas on their thinking and social behavior. When people stop suppressing the influence of the unwanted thoughts, a rebound effect can occur where the thought becomes hyper-accessible.
970:. Although people of all cultures use schemas to understand the world, the content of schemas has been found to differ for individuals based on their cultural upbringing. For example, one study interviewed a Scottish settler and a Bantu herdsman from Swaziland and compared their schemas about cattle. Because cattle are essential to the lifestyle of the Bantu people, the Bantu herdsman's schemas for cattle were far more extensive than the schemas of the Scottish settler. The Bantu herdsman was able to distinguish his cattle from dozens of others, while the Scottish settler was not.
983:
relate to each other. For example, if an
Easterner was asked to judge how a classmate is feeling then he/she might scan everyone's face in the class, and then use this information to judge how the individual is feeling. On the other hand, the typically Western analytic thinking style is a type of thinking style in which people focus on individual objects and neglect to consider the surrounding context. For example, if a Westerner was asked to judge how a classmate is feeling, then he or she might focus only on the classmate's face in order to make the judgment.
994:) versus the Greek philosophical traditions (i.e. of Aristotle and Plato) of the West. Other research indicates that differences in social cognition may originate from physical differences in the environments of the two cultures. One study found that scenes from Japanese cities were 'busier' than those in the US as they contain more objects which compete for attention. In this study, the Eastern holistic thinking style (and focus on the overall context) was attributed to the busier nature of the Japanese physical environment.
1114:. Consistent with this, very young babies recognize and selectively respond to social stimuli such as the voice, face and scent of their mother. From the perspective of the shared intentionality hypothesis, social behavior of these organisms with simple reflexes emerges due to social cognition in social interaction with caregivers. Numerous hyper-scanning research studies in adults and mother-child dyads support the shared intentionality nature of social behavior in young children (see the section Development).
43:
865:
schema evokes extend outside the given information. This may influence social cognition and behaviour regardless of whether these judgements are accurate or not. For example, if an individual is introduced as a teacher, then a "teacher schema" may be activated. Subsequently, we might associate this person with wisdom or authority, or past experiences of teachers that we remember and consider important.
885:
teacher who is timid and shy, a social cognition researcher might be interested in how the student will integrate this new information with his/her existing teacher schema. Pre-established schemas tend to guide attention to new information, as people selectively attend to information that is consistent with the schema and ignore information that is inconsistent. This is referred to as a
876:. Salience is the degree to which a particular social object stands out relative to other social objects in a situation. The higher the salience of an object the more likely that schemas for that object will be made accessible. For example, if there is one female in a group of seven males, female gender schemas may be more accessible and influence the group's thinking and
587:
799:, the development of the human ability to process, store, and apply information about others begins in social learning at the onset of life. Very young organisms cognize social situations in social interaction with their caregivers when knowledge is developing yet limited. The essential question in studying Social cognition is how this ability appears and what
1001:. Relational mobility is a measure of how much choice individuals have in terms of whom to form relationships with, including friendships, romantic partnerships, and work relations. Relational mobility is low in cultures with a subsistence economy that requires tight cooperation and coordination, such as farming, while it is high in cultures based on
930:
Humans are highly attuned to detecting and recognizing faces, even in inanimate objects. This phenomenon, known as pareidolia, is thought to be an evolutionary adaptation that helps humans quickly identify potential threats and allies in their environment. Research has shown that the fusiform gyrus,
921:
Social cognition refers to the cognitive processes involved in perceiving, interpreting, and responding to social information. It plays a central role in human behavior and is critical for navigating social interactions and relationships. There are several examples that demonstrate the centrality of
982:
tend to develop holistic thinking styles, whereas people brought up in
Western cultures like Australia and the USA tend to develop analytic thinking styles. The typically Eastern holistic thinking style is a type of thinking in which people focus on the overall context and the ways in which objects
884:
Social cognition researchers are interested in how new information is integrated into pre-established schemas, especially when the information contrasts with the existing schema. For example, a student may have a pre-established schema that all teachers are assertive and bossy. After encountering a
864:
is "activated" bringing to mind other information which is linked to the original concept by association. This activation often happens unconsciously. As a result of activating such schemas, judgements are formed which go beyond the information actually available, since many of the associations the
939:
Point-light walkers are animations of people walking that are created by attaching small lights to their joints and recording their movements in a dark room. Despite lacking details such as clothing or facial features, humans are able to accurately perceive the gender, emotion, and identity of the
957:
Social exclusion is a powerful social stressor that can elicit emotional and physiological responses similar to physical pain. This response highlights the importance of social connections and acceptance for human well-being and underscores the centrality of social cognition in regulating social
948:
Research has shown that the evolution of the human brain is closely tied to the development of social cognition. The prefrontal cortex, a region of the brain involved in higher-level cognitive processes such as decision-making and social behavior, has undergone significant expansion in humans
880:
toward the female group member. Priming refers to any experience immediately prior to a situation that causes a schema to be more accessible. For example, watching a scary movie late at night might increase the accessibility of frightening schemas, increasing the likelihood that a person will
1098:
with their young children only after a laboratory-induced relational stressor as compared to healthy parents without PTSD. However, whether social cognition is underpinned by domain-specific neural mechanisms is still an open issue. There is now an expanding research field examining how such
831:
Currently, only one hypothesis attempts to explain neurophysiological processes occurring during shared intentionality in all its integral complexity, from the level of interpersonal dynamics to interaction at the neuronal level. By establishing the neurophysiological hypothesis of shared
896:
of activated schemas. It is believed that the situational activation of schemas is automatic, meaning that it is outside individual conscious control. In many situations however, the schematic information that has been activated may be in conflict with the
3255:
Schechter, D.S.; Willheim, E.; Hinojosa, C.; Scholfield-Kleinman, K.; Turner, J.B.; McCaw, J.; Zeanah, C.H.; Myers, M.M. (2010). "Subjective and objective measures of parent-child relationship dysfunction, child separation distress, and joint attention".
1765:
Fishburn, F. A., Murty, V. P., Hlutkowsky, C. O., MacGillivray, C. E., Bemis, L. M., Murphy, M. E., ... & Perlman, S. B. (2018). "Putting our heads together: interpersonal neural synchronization as a biological mechanism for shared intentionality."
973:
Cultural influences have been found to shape some of the basic ways in which people automatically perceive and think about their environment. For example, a number of studies have found that people who grow up in East Asian cultures such as
819:
to explain cognition beginning in the earlier developmental stage through unaware collaboration in mother-child dyads. Other researchers developed the notion, by observing this collaborative interaction from different perspectives, e.g.,
2147:
Szymanski C, Pesquita A, Brennan AA, Perdikis D, Enns JT, Brick TR, et al. (May 2017). "Teams on the same wavelength perform better: Inter-brain phase synchronization constitutes a neural substrate for social facilitation".
782:
may be seeking to explain largely the same phenomena as social cognition, and that these different disciplines might be merged into a "coherent integrated whole". A parallel paradigm has arisen in the study of action, termed
2952:
Fusar-Poli, P.; Deste, G.; Smieskova, R.; Barlati, S.; Yung, AR.; Howes, O.; Stieglitz, RD.; Vita, A.; McGuire, P.; Borgwardt, Stefan (Jun 2012). "Cognitive functioning in prodromal psychosis: a meta-analysis".
723:. A focus on how these cognitive elements are processed is often employed. Social cognition therefore applies and extends many themes, theories, and paradigms from cognitive psychology that can be identified in
3110:
Nazarov, A.; Frewen, P.; Parlar, M.; Oremus, C.; MacQueen, G.; McKinnon, M.; Lanius, R. (2014). "Theory of mind performance in women with posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood abuse".
2269:
Erskine, James A. K.; Ussher, Michael; Cropley, Mark; Elgindi, Abdelaziz; Zaman, Manzir; Corlett, Bethan (2011). "Effect of thought suppression on desire to smoke and tobacco withdrawal symptoms".
1731:
McClung, J. S., Placì, S., Bangerter, A., Clément, F., & Bshary, R. (2017). "The language of cooperation: shared intentionality drives variation in helping as a function of group membership."
1980:
Jardri, R.; Houfflin-Debarge, V.; Delion, P.; Pruvo, J-P.; Thomas, P.; Pins, D. (2012). "Assessing fetal response to maternal speech using a noninvasive functional brain imaging technique."
2319:
Boutsen, L., Humphreys, G. W., Praamstra, P., & Warbrick, T. (2006). "Comparing neural correlates of configural processing in faces and objects: An ERP study of the
Thatcher illusion."
2909:
Subbaraju V, Sundaram S, Narasimhan S (2017). "Identification of lateralized compensatory neural activities within the social brain due to autism spectrum disorder in adolescent males".
889:. Sometimes inconsistent information is sub-categorized and stored away as a special case, leaving the original schema intact without any alterations. This is referred to as subtyping.
1902:
Castiello, U.; Becchio, C.; Zoia, S.; Nelini, C.; Sartori, L.; Blason, L.; D'Ottavio, G.; Bulgheroni, M.; Gallese, V. (2010). "Wired to be social: the ontogeny of human interaction."
3161:
Mazzocco, M.M.M.; Baumgardner, Thomas; Freund, Lisa S.; Reiss, Allan L.; et al. (1998). "Social
Functioning Among Girls with Fragile X or Turner Syndrome and Their Sisters".
2770:
Hornak, J.; Rolls, E.T.; Wade, D. (1996). "Face and voice expression identification in patients with emotional and behavioral changes following ventral frontal lobe damage".
3401:
Atilla, F.; Alimardani, M.; Kawamoto, T.; Hiraki, K. (2023). "Mother-child inter-brain synchrony during a mutual visual search task: A study of feedback valence and role."
868:
When a schema is more accessible it can be more quickly activated and used in a particular situation. Two cognitive processes that increase accessibility of schemas are
1954:
Lecanuet, J.P.; Granier‐Deferre, C.; Jacquet, A.Y.; Capponi, I.; Ledru, L. (1993). "Prenatal discrimination of a male and a female voice uttering the same sentence."
1860:
Val
Danilov I. (2023). "Low-Frequency Oscillations for Nonlocal Neuronal Coupling in Shared Intentionality Before and After Birth: Toward the Origin of Perception."
4117:
648:(members of the same species) or even across species (such as pet) information, include four stages: encoding, storage, retrieval, and processing. In the area of
1094:
show differences in social behavior compared to their unaffected peers. Parents with PTSD show disturbances in at least one aspect of social cognition: namely,
2559:
Miyamoto, Y.; Kitayama, S. (2002). "Cultural variation in correspondence bias: The critical role of attitude diagnosticity of socially constrained behaviour".
1099:
conditions may bias cognitive processes involved in social interaction, or conversely, how such biases may lead to the symptoms associated with the condition.
2251:
Nummenmaa, L.; Peets, K.; Salmivalli, C. (2008). "Automatic
Activation of Adolescents' Peer-Relational Schemas: Evidence from Priming with Facial Identity."
1425:
3204:
Morellini, Lucia; Ceroni, Martino; Rossi, Stefania; Zerboni, Giorgia; Rege-Colet, Laura; Biglia, Elena; Morese, Rosalba; Sacco, Leonardo (2022-07-11).
940:
walker from these animations. This ability highlights the importance of social cognition in recognizing and interpreting human movement and behavior.
3626:
2866:
Brunet, E.; Sarfati, Y.; Hardy-Bayle, MC.; Decety, J. (2000). "A PET investigation of attribution of intentions to others with a non-verbal task".
1035:
disrupt social cognitive processes. For example, damage to the frontal lobes can affect emotional responses to social stimuli and performance on
986:
Nisbett (2003) suggested that cultural differences in social cognition may stem from the various philosophical traditions of the East (i.e.
617:
1426:"Multilevel integrative analyses of human behavior: social neuroscience and the complementing nature of social and biological approaches"
2101:
Hu Y, Pan Y, Shi X, Cai Q, Li X, Cheng X (March 2018). "Inter-brain synchrony and cooperation context in interactive decision making".
840:
One theory of social cognition is social schema theory, although it is not the basis of all social cognition studies (for example, see
637:
that focuses on how people process, store, and apply information about other people and social situations. It focuses on the role that
4144:
1715:
Val
Danilov I. & Mihailova S. (2023). "Empirical Evidence of Shared Intentionality: Towards Bioengineering Systems Development."
1154:
1005:
and in urban industrial cultures. A cross-cultural study found that the relational mobility is lowest in East Asian countries where
1821:"Shared Intentionality Modulation at the Cell Level: Low-Frequency Oscillations for Temporal Coordination in Bioengineering Systems"
4012:
327:
1748:
Shteynberg, G., & Galinsky, A. D. (2011). "Implicit coordination: Sharing goals with similar others intensifies goal pursuit.
949:
compared to other primates. This expansion is thought to reflect the increased importance of social cognition in human evolution.
2351:
Eisenberger, N. I.; Lieberman, M. D. (2004). "Why rejection hurts: a common neural alarm system for physical and social pain."
554:
1792:
Val
Danilov, I. (2023). "Theoretical Grounds of Shared Intentionality for Neuroscience in Developing Bioengineering Systems."
3874:
3619:
3385:
2754:
2729:
2692:
1666:
1637:
1570:
1408:
1322:
4223:
3593:. "Social Organization of Cognitive Development, Internalization and Externalization of Constraint Systems". In Demetriou,
2419:
Nisbett, R.; Peng, K.; Choi, I.; Norenzayan, A. (2001). "Culture and
Systems of thought: Holistic vs. analytic cognition".
3053:
Nazarov, Anthony; Walaszczyk, Victoria; Frewen, Paul; Oremus, Carolina; Lanius, Ruth; McKinnon, Margaret C. (2016-11-01).
4238:
4228:
1199:
1106:). For example, it has been suggested that some aspects of psychological processes that promote social behavior (such as
1473:
Cacioppo, J.T. (2002). "Social neuroscience: understanding the pieces fosters understanding the whole and vice versa".
1027:, whose behaviour was reported to have changed after an accident damaged one or both of his frontal lobes. More recent
931:
a region of the brain involved in face processing, is particularly sensitive to perceiving faces in non-face objects.
4122:
3585:
3549:
3507:
3485:
1599:
2663:
Yuki, Masaki; Schug, Joanna (2012). "Relational mobility: A socioecological approach to personal relationships". In
3612:
1999:"Shared intentionality modulates interpersonal neural synchronization at the establishment of communication system"
610:
534:
652:, social cognition refers to a specific approach in which these processes are studied according to the methods of
4441:
3417:
1928:
Lee, G.Y.C.; Kisilevsky, B.S. (2014). "Fetuses respond to father’s voice but prefer mother’s voice after birth."
1079:
1915:
Kisilevsky, B.C. (2016). "Fetal Auditory Processing: Implications for Language Development? Fetal Development."
1456:
1102:
The development of social cognitive processes in infants and children has also been researched extensively (see
3577:
3541:
3499:
3477:
3455:
1236:"The Relation between Nonverbal IQ and Postoperative CI Outcomes in Cochlear Implant Users: Preliminary Result"
529:
357:
3975:
1071:
1018:
672:
657:
559:
126:
3436:
2606:"Relational mobility predicts social behaviors in 39 countries and is tied to historical farming and threat"
4421:
2051:"Joint control of visually guided actions involves concordant increases in behavioural and neural coupling"
967:
728:
569:
482:
4436:
4314:
4139:
3717:
3690:
853:
603:
4451:
4446:
4426:
3879:
3680:
688:
73:
20:
2203:"Can contextualisation increase understanding during man-machine communication? A theory driven study"
1865:
1820:
1797:
1720:
3931:
1169:
524:
515:
437:
257:
138:
2827:
2573:
2482:
1522:
1023:
Early interest in the relationship between brain function and social cognition includes the case of
4294:
3804:
2813:
Stone, V.E.; Baron-Cohen, S.; Knight, R.T. (1998). "Frontal lobe contributions to theory of mind".
1703:
1686:
1103:
707:. Common to social cognition theories is the idea that information is represented in the brain as "
148:
116:
4331:
4207:
3635:
2524:(2008). "Placing the face in context: Cultural differences in the perception of facial emotion".
1941:
Hepper, P.G.; Scott, D.; Shahidullah, S. (1993). "Newborn and fetal response to maternal voice."
1194:
869:
812:
787:, which is concerned with understanding the representation of action and the associated process.
549:
447:
218:
183:
168:
163:
153:
102:
62:
3734:
1967:
Hepper P. (2015). "Behavior during the prenatal period: Adaptive for development and survival."
997:
Later studies find that these differences in cognitive style can be explained by differences in
4022:
3761:
2822:
2568:
2477:
1517:
1159:
1111:
1055:
779:
775:
763:
than general psychology approach, as it traditionally discussed internal mental states such as
708:
564:
497:
387:
297:
252:
228:
203:
133:
121:
87:
3254:
4321:
3980:
3814:
2720:
Social Neuroscience: Integrating Biological and Psychological Explanations of Social Behavior
2367:
Johansson, G. (1973). "Visual perception of biological motion and a model for its analysis."
1184:
1134:
1032:
816:
803:
processes underlie it in organisms in the sensorimotor stage of development with only simple
544:
539:
457:
322:
287:
262:
158:
57:
52:
1561:
Shaffer, D.R.; Kipp, K. (2009). "Chapter 12: Theories of social and cognitive development".
4289:
3824:
3789:
3766:
3724:
3648:
2617:
2201:
Alpay, L.; Verhoef, J.; Teeni, D.; Putter, H.; Toussaint, P.; Zwetsloot-Schonk, J. (2008).
1164:
1129:
1087:
873:
748:
703:
in the late 1960s and early 1970s and is now the dominant model and approach in mainstream
700:
653:
442:
367:
277:
112:
97:
2669:
Relationship Science: Integrating Evolutionary, Neuroscience, and Sociocultural Approaches
2170:
1423:
8:
4233:
3970:
3921:
3869:
2517:
1234:
Park, Mina; Song, Jae-Jin; Oh, Seo Jin; Shin, Min-Sup; Lee, Jun Ho; Oh, Seung Ha (2015).
1214:
1209:
1174:
998:
861:
712:
638:
372:
362:
347:
312:
307:
292:
272:
267:
143:
82:
3055:"Moral reasoning in women with posttraumatic stress disorder related to childhood abuse"
2966:
2621:
2023:
1998:
1343:"Social cognition in schizophrenia: from social stimuli processing to social engagement"
4431:
4326:
4243:
4112:
3944:
3846:
3829:
3754:
3431:
3377:
3324:
3281:
3240:
3205:
3186:
3143:
3087:
3054:
3011:
2934:
2891:
2848:
2795:
2698:
2640:
2605:
2444:
2302:
2229:
2202:
2183:
2126:
2075:
2050:
1543:
1369:
1342:
1270:
1235:
1189:
1179:
1028:
860:. According to this view, when we see or think of a concept a mental representation or
841:
716:
467:
412:
407:
342:
282:
243:
173:
1622:
1531:
687:. In cognitive neuroscience the biological basis of social cognition is investigated.
4102:
4052:
3859:
3794:
3700:
3685:
3581:
3573:
3545:
3537:
3523:
3503:
3495:
3481:
3473:
3451:
3381:
3316:
3273:
3227:
3178:
3135:
3127:
3092:
3074:
3015:
2970:
2926:
2883:
2852:
2840:
2787:
2783:
2750:
2725:
2718:
2688:
2645:
2586:
2541:
2495:
2436:
2294:
2286:
2234:
2175:
2161:
2118:
2080:
2028:
1662:
1658:
1633:
1595:
1591:
1566:
1535:
1490:
1448:
1404:
1374:
1318:
1275:
1257:
1075:
906:
886:
796:
736:
732:
704:
649:
591:
392:
317:
223:
208:
92:
3328:
3190:
3147:
2895:
2799:
2702:
2448:
2306:
2130:
2114:
4259:
3712:
3308:
3285:
3265:
3235:
3217:
3170:
3119:
3082:
3066:
3001:
2962:
2938:
2918:
2875:
2832:
2779:
2680:
2672:
2635:
2625:
2578:
2533:
2487:
2428:
2340:
2324:
2278:
2224:
2214:
2187:
2165:
2157:
2110:
2070:
2062:
2018:
2010:
1917:
Research on Brain and Behavior, Environmental In uences, and Emerging Technologies,
1837:
1832:
1547:
1527:
1482:
1440:
1364:
1354:
1265:
1247:
821:
397:
352:
337:
332:
213:
188:
3556:
How the Mind Explains Behavior: Folk Explanations, Meaning, and Social Interaction
4383:
4357:
4042:
3939:
3909:
3695:
3461:
2465:
1400:
1314:
1144:
1124:
1107:
1095:
910:
800:
784:
193:
3342:
3299:
Stone, V.E.; Gerrans, P. (2006). "What's domain-specific about theory of mind".
3029:
2582:
2491:
2432:
2219:
1486:
1444:
4264:
3960:
3465:
3269:
2537:
2521:
2066:
2014:
1204:
1044:
1036:
756:
724:
3368:
3312:
3222:
3174:
3006:
2989:
2282:
1424:
Cacioppo, J.T.; Berntson, G.G.; Sheridan, J.F. & McClintock, M.K. (2000).
4415:
4352:
4304:
4197:
4192:
4171:
4162:
4127:
4057:
4032:
4017:
3864:
3671:
3590:
3231:
3131:
3078:
2356:
2290:
1753:
1359:
1261:
1067:
1048:
1040:
845:
808:
680:
502:
462:
382:
377:
2836:
2630:
1736:
4202:
4187:
4154:
3799:
3320:
3277:
3139:
3096:
2974:
2930:
2887:
2879:
2865:
2664:
2649:
2590:
2545:
2499:
2440:
2298:
2238:
2179:
2122:
2084:
2032:
1539:
1494:
1452:
1378:
1279:
1024:
987:
898:
825:
744:
645:
487:
178:
3604:
3182:
3070:
2844:
2791:
1889:
Chapter 2: The Montessori philosophy. From Lillard, P. P. Lillard (1972).
1252:
774:
It has been suggested that other disciplines in social psychology such as
4378:
4336:
4166:
3914:
3884:
3749:
3512:
2386:
Aronson, E.; Wilson, T; Akert, R. (2010). "Chapter 3: Social Cognition".
1876:
OECD (2007). "Understanding the Brain: The Birth of a Learning Science."
1629:
1002:
857:
768:
684:
402:
107:
1997:
Liu J, Zhang R, Xie E, Lin Y, Chen D, Liu Y, et al. (August 2023).
4299:
4269:
4047:
3854:
3123:
1006:
893:
720:
668:
634:
302:
198:
34:
3448:
Social Cognition: How Individuals Construct Reality: Social Psychology
2922:
2684:
2676:
4309:
4097:
4037:
3965:
3834:
3771:
3744:
3729:
2418:
1083:
1063:
760:
740:
452:
42:
4134:
3900:
3809:
3739:
3675:
3666:
2200:
1866:
https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-04-192
1798:
https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-01-156
1721:
https://www.lidsen.com/journals/neurobiology/neurobiology-07-02-167
1149:
991:
902:
877:
477:
472:
432:
2515:
1293:
644:
More technically, social cognition refers to how people deal with
4388:
3707:
3563:
Other Minds: How Humans Bridge the Divide Between Self and Others
1586:
Husain, A. (2012). "Chapter 5: Social Perception and Cognition".
1139:
909:
the influence of the schematic information on their thinking and
849:
2990:"Social cognition in major depressive disorder: A new paradigm?"
2812:
2146:
1652:
966:
Social psychologists have become increasingly interested in the
4362:
4107:
4062:
4027:
3904:
3819:
3781:
2951:
1059:
804:
764:
752:
676:
675:, most often to refer to various social abilities disrupted in
3160:
3052:
979:
975:
881:
perceive shadows and background noises as potential threats.
759:). It is likely that social psychology has always had a more
1508:
Adolphs, R. (1999). "Social cognition and the human brain".
844:). Social schema theory builds on and uses terminology from
16:
Study of cognitive processes involved in social interactions
3517:
Social Beings: A Core Motives approach to Social Psychology
3203:
2988:
Billeke, P.; Boardman, S.; Doraiswamy, P. (December 2013).
2908:
2268:
1091:
492:
2715:
2049:
Painter DR, Kim JJ, Renton AI, Mattingley JB (June 2021).
2048:
3109:
2987:
2769:
2385:
1394:
4118:
Pervasive developmental disorder not otherwise specified
2671:. American Psychological Association. pp. 137–151.
2335:
Dunbar, R. I. M. (2008). "The social brain hypothesis."
1733:
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences,
892:
Social cognition researchers are also interested in the
767:
and desires when mainstream psychology was dominated by
848:
in cognitive psychology, which describes how ideas or "
2468:; Nisbett, R. (2006). "Culture and change blindness".
1984:
2012, 30: 159–161. doi:10.1016/j.ijdevneu.2011.11.002.
1856:
1854:
1852:
1850:
1848:
1814:
1812:
1810:
1808:
1806:
1336:
1334:
1311:
Social Cognition: Development, Neuroscience and Autism
3206:"Social Cognition in Adult ADHD: A Systematic Review"
2747:
Descartes' Error: Emotion, reason and the human brain
2405:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 249.
2337:
Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews,
1796:
2023; 7(1): 156; doi:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2301156.
1719:
2023; 7(2): 167; doi:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2302167.
699:
Social cognition came to prominence with the rise of
691:
study the development of social cognition abilities.
2558:
1982:
International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience,
1864:
2023; 7(4): 192; doi:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2304192.
1390:
1388:
1009:
is common, and highest in South American countries.
3490:Donaghue, Ngaire, Iain Walker, Martha Augoustinos.
3470:
Social Cognition: Perspectives on Social Psychology
1845:
1803:
1563:
Developmental Psychology: Childhood and Adolescence
1331:
1308:
3367:
3258:Psychiatry: Interpersonal and Biological Processes
2717:
1788:
1786:
1784:
1782:
1780:
1778:
1776:
1621:
2981:
1653:Augustinos, M.; Walker, I.; Donaghue, N. (2006).
1619:
1385:
943:
4413:
3405:18:4, 232-244, DOI:10.1080/17470919.2023.2228545
3298:
2341:https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1520-6505(1998)6:5
2325:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.03.023
1012:
901:of the situation in which case an individual is
3599:Neo-Piagetian Theories of Cognitive Development
2945:
2902:
2610:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
2597:
2142:
2140:
2096:
2094:
2044:
2042:
1992:
1990:
1773:
1560:
811:. Professor Michael Tomasello introduced the
2511:
2509:
2460:
2458:
1996:
1943:Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology,
1472:
1340:
1233:
925:
3620:
3163:Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders
2656:
2464:
611:
3492:Social Cognition: An Integrated Introduction
2561:Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
2526:Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
2137:
2091:
2039:
1987:
1768:Social cognitive and affective neuroscience,
3634:
2506:
2455:
2100:
1818:
1655:Social Cognition an Integrated Introduction
952:
3627:
3613:
2806:
2414:
2412:
2381:
2379:
2377:
2357:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2004.05.010
1754:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2011.04.012
1750:Journal of Experimental Social Psychology,
1395:Blair, J.; Mitchel, D.; Blair, K. (2005).
1341:Billeke, P.; Aboitiz, F. (February 2013).
618:
604:
4145:Social (pragmatic) communication disorder
3239:
3221:
3086:
3005:
2826:
2716:Harmon-Jones, E.; Winkielman, P. (2007).
2662:
2639:
2629:
2572:
2481:
2228:
2218:
2169:
2074:
2022:
1836:
1521:
1368:
1358:
1304:
1302:
1292:(International Social Cognition Network:
1269:
1251:
1155:Neurodevelopmental framework for learning
4013:Basic interpersonal communicative skills
3534:Social Cognition: Making Sense of People
3527:Social Cognition: From Brains to Culture
2400:
2394:
1737:http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2017.1682
1683:The Cultural Origins of Human Cognition.
1615:
1613:
1611:
968:influence of culture on social cognition
4080:
3365:
2744:
2603:
2409:
2374:
1507:
961:
4414:
3529:. 3rd ed. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2008.
3059:European Journal of Psychotraumatology
1585:
1579:
1554:
1299:
934:
922:social cognition in human experience.
4079:
4001:
3875:High-context and low-context cultures
3646:
3608:
2604:Thomson, Robert; et al. (2018).
1971:9(1): 38-43. DOI: 10.1111/cdep.12104.
1700:Becoming Human: A Theory of Ontogeny.
1608:
4224:Computer processing of body language
4002:
3558:. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2004.
2207:The Open Medical Informatics Journal
1309:Striano, T.; Reid, V., eds. (2009).
4239:List of facial expression databases
4229:Emotion recognition in conversation
2967:10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2011.1592
1200:Social cognitive theory of morality
667:has been used in multiple areas in
13:
3411:
1620:Fiske, S.T.; Taylor, S.E. (1991).
795:According to the received view in
14:
4463:
4123:Childhood disintegrative disorder
3565:. New York: Guilford Press, 2005.
2815:Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
1397:Psychopath: emotion and the brain
835:
2911:European Journal of Neuroscience
2667:; Adams, G.; Kunkel, A. (eds.).
2162:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.03.013
1956:Early development and parenting,
1565:. Wadsworth Publishing Company.
807:which do not maintain bilateral
585:
41:
3395:
3369:"Chapter 5: Social Development"
3359:
3335:
3292:
3248:
3197:
3154:
3103:
3046:
3022:
2859:
2763:
2738:
2709:
2552:
2369:Perception & Psychophysics,
2361:
2345:
2329:
2313:
2262:
2245:
2194:
2115:10.1016/j.biopsycho.2017.12.005
1974:
1969:Child Development Perspectives,
1961:
1948:
1935:
1922:
1909:
1896:
1883:
1880:p. 165. ISBN 978-92-64-02913-2.
1870:
1759:
1742:
1725:
1709:
1692:
1675:
1646:
1294:http://www.socialcognition.info
1080:antisocial personality disorder
3647:
3561:Malle, B. & Hodges, S. D.
3112:Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica
2171:11858/00-001M-0000-002D-059A-1
1891:Montessori: A Modern Approach.
1838:10.21926/obm.neurobiol.2304185
1501:
1466:
1417:
1286:
1227:
944:Data on social-brain evolution
790:
19:For the academic journal, see
1:
2353:Trends in cognitive sciences,
1532:10.1016/S1364-6613(99)01399-6
1240:BioMed Research International
1221:
1072:posttraumatic stress disorder
1019:Social cognitive neuroscience
1013:Social cognitive neuroscience
916:
658:information processing theory
641:play in social interactions.
328:Industrial and organizational
3437:Resources in other libraries
2784:10.1016/0028-3932(95)00106-9
1930:Developmental Psychobiology,
1510:Trends in Cognitive Sciences
1049:inability to recognize faces
729:representativeness heuristic
483:Human factors and ergonomics
7:
4140:Nonverbal learning disorder
3718:Speech-independent gestures
3691:Facial Action Coding System
2583:10.1037/0022-3514.83.5.1239
2492:10.1207/s15516709cog0000_63
2433:10.1037/0033-295X.108.2.291
2220:10.2174/1874431100802010082
1487:10.1037/0003-066X.57.11.819
1445:10.1037/0033-2909.126.6.829
1117:
926:Perceiving faces everywhere
689:Developmental psychologists
10:
4468:
3880:Interpersonal relationship
3681:Body-to-body communication
3494:. Pine Forge Press, 2006.
3450:. Psychology Press, 2004.
3270:10.1521/psyc.2010.73.2.130
2994:Translational Neuroscience
2538:10.1037/0022-3514.94.3.365
2067:10.1038/s42003-021-02319-3
2015:10.1038/s42003-023-05197-z
1819:Val Danilov, Igor (2023).
1702:Cambridge, Massachusetts:
1685:Cambridge, Massachusetts:
1016:
694:
21:Social Cognition (journal)
18:
4371:
4345:
4285:
4278:
4252:
4216:
4180:
4153:
4090:
4086:
4075:
4008:
3997:
3953:
3930:
3893:
3845:
3780:
3659:
3655:
3642:
3432:Resources in your library
3376:. B. Blackwell. pp.
3313:10.1080/17470910601029221
3223:10.3389/fpsyg.2022.940445
3007:10.2478/s13380-013-0147-9
2283:10.1007/s00213-011-2391-4
1893:Schocken Books, New York.
1170:Paranoid social cognition
258:Applied behavior analysis
4295:Behavioral communication
3519:. New York: Wiley, 2004.
1704:Harvard University Press
1687:Harvard University Press
1360:10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00004
1104:developmental psychology
1031:studies have shown that
953:Pain of social exclusion
3735:Interpersonal synchrony
3636:Nonverbal communication
3210:Frontiers in Psychology
3175:10.1023/A:1026000111467
2837:10.1162/089892998562942
2631:10.1073/pnas.1713191115
1592:Pearson Education India
1353:(4): eCollection 2013.
1347:Frontiers in Psychiatry
1195:Social cognitive theory
1056:psychological disorders
854:represented in the mind
813:psychological construct
448:Behavioral neuroscience
103:Behavioral neuroscience
4442:Social learning theory
4332:Monastic sign lexicons
4023:Emotional intelligence
3601:. New York, Routledge.
3366:Bremner, J.G. (1994).
2880:10.1006/nimg.1999.0525
2745:Damasio, A.R. (1994).
2055:Communications Biology
2003:Communications Biology
1681:Tomasello, M. (1999).
1433:Psychological Bulletin
1160:Observational learning
780:social representations
776:social identity theory
673:cognitive neuroscience
498:Psychology of religion
438:Behavioral engineering
122:Cognitive neuroscience
88:Affective neuroscience
4322:Impression management
3071:10.3402/ejpt.v7.31028
2749:. New York: Picador.
2401:Bartlett, F. (1932).
2103:Biological Psychology
1735:284(1863), 20171682.
1475:American Psychologist
1185:Shared intentionality
1135:Distributed cognition
817:shared intentionality
592:Psychology portal
4337:Verbal communication
4290:Animal communication
4208:Targeted advertising
3725:Haptic communication
3403:Social Neuroscience,
2421:Psychological Review
1165:Online participation
1130:Cognitive dissonance
962:Cultural differences
701:cognitive psychology
654:cognitive psychology
4422:Behavioral concepts
4346:Non-verbal language
4234:Gesture recognition
4081:Further information
3971:Emotion recognition
3922:Silent service code
3572:. Routledge, 2000.
3536:. MIT Press, 1999.
3522:Fiske, Susan &
3462:Brewer, Marilynn B.
3301:Social Neuroscience
2955:Arch Gen Psychiatry
2622:2018PNAS..115.7521T
1752:47(6), 1291-1294.,
1253:10.1155/2015/313274
1215:Social neuroscience
1210:Social intelligence
1175:Relational mobility
999:relational mobility
935:Point-light walkers
757:primacy and recency
639:cognitive processes
443:Behavioral genetics
358:Occupational health
98:Behavioral genetics
29:Part of a series on
4437:Enactive cognition
4372:Art and literature
4327:Meta-communication
4315:Passive-aggressive
4244:Sentiment analysis
3945:Non-verbal leakage
3568:Pennington, Dona.
3524:Taylor, Shelley E.
3124:10.1111/acps.12142
2724:. Guilford Press.
2271:Psychopharmacology
1190:Situated cognition
1180:Embodied cognition
1108:facial recognition
1029:neuropsychological
842:attribution theory
801:neurophysiological
797:cognitive sciences
709:cognitive elements
633:is a topic within
560:Schools of thought
398:Sport and exercise
244:Applied psychology
4452:Social philosophy
4447:Social psychology
4427:Cognitive science
4409:
4408:
4405:
4404:
4401:
4400:
4397:
4396:
4103:Asperger syndrome
4071:
4070:
4053:Social competence
3993:
3992:
3989:
3988:
3795:Emotional prosody
3701:Subtle expression
3686:Facial expression
3418:Library resources
3387:978-0-631-14809-8
2923:10.1111/ejn.13634
2756:978-0-333-65656-3
2731:978-1-59385-404-1
2694:978-1-4338-1123-4
2677:10.1037/13489-007
2616:(29): 7521–7526.
2470:Cognitive Science
2388:Social Psychology
2253:Child Development
1668:978-0-7619-4218-4
1659:SAGE Publications
1639:978-0-07-100910-2
1588:Social Psychology
1572:978-0-495-60171-5
1410:978-0-631-23336-7
1403:. pp. 25–7.
1324:978-1-4051-6217-3
1088:Turner's syndrome
1076:Williams syndrome
887:confirmation bias
856:and how they are
737:confirmation bias
733:base rate fallacy
705:social psychology
650:social psychology
628:
627:
525:Counseling topics
468:Consumer behavior
209:Psycholinguistics
93:Affective science
4459:
4283:
4282:
4260:Ray Birdwhistell
4088:
4087:
4077:
4076:
4003:Broader concepts
3999:
3998:
3976:First impression
3657:
3656:
3644:
3643:
3629:
3622:
3615:
3606:
3605:
3597:, (1992, eds.),
3570:Social Cognition
3446:Bless, Herbert.
3423:Social cognition
3406:
3399:
3393:
3391:
3371:
3363:
3357:
3356:
3354:
3353:
3339:
3333:
3332:
3296:
3290:
3289:
3252:
3246:
3245:
3243:
3225:
3201:
3195:
3194:
3158:
3152:
3151:
3107:
3101:
3100:
3090:
3050:
3044:
3043:
3041:
3040:
3026:
3020:
3019:
3009:
2985:
2979:
2978:
2949:
2943:
2942:
2906:
2900:
2899:
2863:
2857:
2856:
2830:
2810:
2804:
2803:
2772:Neuropsychologia
2767:
2761:
2760:
2742:
2736:
2735:
2723:
2713:
2707:
2706:
2660:
2654:
2653:
2643:
2633:
2601:
2595:
2594:
2576:
2567:(5): 1239–1248.
2556:
2550:
2549:
2518:Ellsworth, P. C.
2513:
2504:
2503:
2485:
2462:
2453:
2452:
2416:
2407:
2406:
2398:
2392:
2391:
2383:
2372:
2365:
2359:
2349:
2343:
2333:
2327:
2323:32(1), 352-367.
2317:
2311:
2310:
2266:
2260:
2249:
2243:
2242:
2232:
2222:
2198:
2192:
2191:
2173:
2144:
2135:
2134:
2098:
2089:
2088:
2078:
2046:
2037:
2036:
2026:
1994:
1985:
1978:
1972:
1965:
1959:
1952:
1946:
1939:
1933:
1926:
1920:
1913:
1907:
1906:5(10), p.e13199.
1900:
1894:
1887:
1881:
1878:OECD Publishing.
1874:
1868:
1862:OBM Neurobiology
1858:
1843:
1842:
1840:
1825:OBM Neurobiology
1816:
1801:
1794:OBM Neurobiology
1790:
1771:
1763:
1757:
1746:
1740:
1729:
1723:
1717:OBM Neurobiology
1713:
1707:
1696:
1690:
1679:
1673:
1672:
1650:
1644:
1643:
1627:
1624:Social Cognition
1617:
1606:
1605:
1583:
1577:
1576:
1558:
1552:
1551:
1525:
1505:
1499:
1498:
1470:
1464:
1463:
1461:
1455:. Archived from
1430:
1421:
1415:
1414:
1392:
1383:
1382:
1372:
1362:
1338:
1329:
1328:
1306:
1297:
1290:
1284:
1283:
1273:
1255:
1231:
1047:can lead to the
1043:, damage to the
822:psychophysiology
665:social cognition
631:Social cognition
620:
613:
606:
590:
589:
588:
555:Research methods
214:Psychophysiology
74:Basic psychology
45:
26:
25:
4467:
4466:
4462:
4461:
4460:
4458:
4457:
4456:
4412:
4411:
4410:
4393:
4384:Mimoplastic art
4367:
4358:Tactile signing
4341:
4274:
4248:
4212:
4176:
4149:
4082:
4067:
4043:Social behavior
4004:
3985:
3949:
3940:Microexpression
3926:
3910:One-bit message
3889:
3841:
3776:
3696:Microexpression
3651:
3638:
3633:
3472:. Wiley, 2004.
3458:, 9780863778292
3443:
3442:
3441:
3426:
3425:
3421:
3414:
3412:Further reading
3409:
3400:
3396:
3388:
3364:
3360:
3351:
3349:
3347:psycnet.apa.org
3341:
3340:
3336:
3307:(3–4): 309–19.
3297:
3293:
3253:
3249:
3202:
3198:
3159:
3155:
3108:
3104:
3051:
3047:
3038:
3036:
3034:psycnet.apa.org
3028:
3027:
3023:
2986:
2982:
2950:
2946:
2907:
2903:
2864:
2860:
2828:10.1.1.330.1488
2811:
2807:
2768:
2764:
2757:
2743:
2739:
2732:
2714:
2710:
2695:
2661:
2657:
2602:
2598:
2574:10.1.1.319.6787
2557:
2553:
2514:
2507:
2483:10.1.1.594.9397
2463:
2456:
2417:
2410:
2399:
2395:
2384:
2375:
2371:14(2), 201-211.
2366:
2362:
2355:8(7), 294-300.
2350:
2346:
2339:6(5), 178-190.
2334:
2330:
2318:
2314:
2267:
2263:
2250:
2246:
2199:
2195:
2145:
2138:
2099:
2092:
2047:
2040:
1995:
1988:
1979:
1975:
1966:
1962:
1953:
1949:
1940:
1936:
1927:
1923:
1914:
1910:
1901:
1897:
1888:
1884:
1875:
1871:
1859:
1846:
1817:
1804:
1791:
1774:
1770:13(8), 841-849.
1764:
1760:
1747:
1743:
1730:
1726:
1714:
1710:
1697:
1693:
1680:
1676:
1669:
1651:
1647:
1640:
1618:
1609:
1602:
1584:
1580:
1573:
1559:
1555:
1523:10.1.1.207.7847
1506:
1502:
1471:
1467:
1459:
1428:
1422:
1418:
1411:
1401:Wiley-Blackwell
1393:
1386:
1339:
1332:
1325:
1315:Wiley-Blackwell
1307:
1300:
1291:
1287:
1232:
1228:
1224:
1219:
1145:Joint attention
1125:Behavioral sink
1120:
1096:joint attention
1021:
1015:
1003:nomadic herding
964:
955:
946:
937:
928:
919:
911:social behavior
838:
793:
785:motor cognition
697:
624:
586:
584:
577:
576:
575:
574:
550:Psychotherapies
518:
508:
507:
428:
420:
419:
418:
417:
246:
236:
235:
234:
233:
194:Neuropsychology
76:
24:
17:
12:
11:
5:
4465:
4455:
4454:
4449:
4444:
4439:
4434:
4429:
4424:
4407:
4406:
4403:
4402:
4399:
4398:
4395:
4394:
4392:
4391:
4386:
4381:
4375:
4373:
4369:
4368:
4366:
4365:
4360:
4355:
4349:
4347:
4343:
4342:
4340:
4339:
4334:
4329:
4324:
4319:
4318:
4317:
4312:
4307:
4302:
4292:
4286:
4280:
4276:
4275:
4273:
4272:
4267:
4265:Charles Darwin
4262:
4256:
4254:
4250:
4249:
4247:
4246:
4241:
4236:
4231:
4226:
4220:
4218:
4214:
4213:
4211:
4210:
4205:
4200:
4195:
4190:
4184:
4182:
4178:
4177:
4175:
4174:
4169:
4159:
4157:
4151:
4150:
4148:
4147:
4142:
4137:
4132:
4131:
4130:
4125:
4120:
4115:
4110:
4105:
4094:
4092:
4084:
4083:
4073:
4072:
4069:
4068:
4066:
4065:
4060:
4055:
4050:
4045:
4040:
4035:
4030:
4025:
4020:
4015:
4009:
4006:
4005:
3995:
3994:
3991:
3990:
3987:
3986:
3984:
3983:
3978:
3973:
3968:
3963:
3961:Affect display
3957:
3955:
3951:
3950:
3948:
3947:
3942:
3936:
3934:
3928:
3927:
3925:
3924:
3919:
3918:
3917:
3907:
3897:
3895:
3891:
3890:
3888:
3887:
3882:
3877:
3872:
3867:
3862:
3857:
3851:
3849:
3847:Social context
3843:
3842:
3840:
3839:
3838:
3837:
3832:
3827:
3822:
3817:
3812:
3807:
3797:
3792:
3786:
3784:
3778:
3777:
3775:
3774:
3769:
3764:
3759:
3758:
3757:
3755:Pupil dilation
3752:
3742:
3737:
3732:
3727:
3722:
3721:
3720:
3715:
3705:
3704:
3703:
3698:
3693:
3683:
3678:
3669:
3663:
3661:
3653:
3652:
3640:
3639:
3632:
3631:
3624:
3617:
3609:
3603:
3602:
3591:Valsiner, Jaan
3588:
3566:
3559:
3552:
3530:
3520:
3510:
3488:
3466:Miles Hewstone
3459:
3440:
3439:
3434:
3428:
3427:
3416:
3415:
3413:
3410:
3408:
3407:
3394:
3386:
3358:
3334:
3291:
3247:
3196:
3153:
3118:(3): 193–201.
3102:
3045:
3021:
3000:(4): 437–447.
2980:
2944:
2917:(6): 631–642.
2901:
2858:
2805:
2762:
2755:
2737:
2730:
2708:
2693:
2655:
2596:
2551:
2532:(3): 365–381.
2505:
2476:(2): 381–389.
2454:
2427:(2): 291–310.
2408:
2393:
2373:
2360:
2344:
2328:
2312:
2277:(1): 205–211.
2261:
2244:
2193:
2136:
2090:
2038:
1986:
1973:
1960:
1958:2(4): 217-228.
1947:
1934:
1921:
1908:
1895:
1882:
1869:
1844:
1802:
1772:
1758:
1741:
1724:
1708:
1698:Tomasello, M.
1691:
1674:
1667:
1645:
1638:
1607:
1600:
1578:
1571:
1553:
1516:(12): 469–79.
1500:
1481:(11): 819–31.
1465:
1462:on 2015-08-06.
1416:
1409:
1384:
1330:
1323:
1298:
1285:
1225:
1223:
1220:
1218:
1217:
1212:
1207:
1205:Social emotion
1202:
1197:
1192:
1187:
1182:
1177:
1172:
1167:
1162:
1157:
1152:
1147:
1142:
1137:
1132:
1127:
1121:
1119:
1116:
1045:fusiform gyrus
1039:tasks. In the
1037:theory of mind
1033:brain injuries
1014:
1011:
963:
960:
954:
951:
945:
942:
936:
933:
927:
924:
918:
915:
837:
836:Social schemas
834:
792:
789:
696:
693:
626:
625:
623:
622:
615:
608:
600:
597:
596:
595:
594:
579:
578:
573:
572:
567:
562:
557:
552:
547:
542:
537:
532:
527:
521:
520:
519:
514:
513:
510:
509:
506:
505:
500:
495:
490:
485:
480:
475:
470:
465:
460:
455:
450:
445:
440:
435:
429:
426:
425:
422:
421:
416:
415:
410:
405:
400:
395:
390:
385:
380:
375:
370:
365:
360:
355:
350:
345:
340:
335:
330:
325:
320:
315:
310:
305:
300:
295:
290:
285:
280:
275:
270:
265:
260:
255:
249:
248:
247:
242:
241:
238:
237:
232:
231:
226:
221:
216:
211:
206:
201:
196:
191:
186:
181:
176:
171:
166:
161:
156:
151:
146:
141:
139:Cross-cultural
136:
131:
130:
129:
119:
110:
105:
100:
95:
90:
85:
79:
78:
77:
72:
71:
68:
67:
66:
65:
60:
55:
47:
46:
38:
37:
31:
30:
15:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
4464:
4453:
4450:
4448:
4445:
4443:
4440:
4438:
4435:
4433:
4430:
4428:
4425:
4423:
4420:
4419:
4417:
4390:
4387:
4385:
4382:
4380:
4377:
4376:
4374:
4370:
4364:
4361:
4359:
4356:
4354:
4353:Sign language
4351:
4350:
4348:
4344:
4338:
4335:
4333:
4330:
4328:
4325:
4323:
4320:
4316:
4313:
4311:
4308:
4306:
4303:
4301:
4298:
4297:
4296:
4293:
4291:
4288:
4287:
4284:
4281:
4277:
4271:
4268:
4266:
4263:
4261:
4258:
4257:
4255:
4251:
4245:
4242:
4240:
4237:
4235:
4232:
4230:
4227:
4225:
4222:
4221:
4219:
4215:
4209:
4206:
4204:
4201:
4199:
4198:Freudian slip
4196:
4194:
4193:Lie detection
4191:
4189:
4186:
4185:
4183:
4179:
4173:
4172:Mirror neuron
4170:
4168:
4164:
4163:Limbic system
4161:
4160:
4158:
4156:
4152:
4146:
4143:
4141:
4138:
4136:
4133:
4129:
4128:Rett syndrome
4126:
4124:
4121:
4119:
4116:
4114:
4111:
4109:
4106:
4104:
4101:
4100:
4099:
4096:
4095:
4093:
4089:
4085:
4078:
4074:
4064:
4061:
4059:
4058:Social skills
4056:
4054:
4051:
4049:
4046:
4044:
4041:
4039:
4036:
4034:
4033:People skills
4031:
4029:
4026:
4024:
4021:
4019:
4018:Communication
4016:
4014:
4011:
4010:
4007:
4000:
3996:
3982:
3979:
3977:
3974:
3972:
3969:
3967:
3964:
3962:
3959:
3958:
3956:
3954:Multi-faceted
3952:
3946:
3943:
3941:
3938:
3937:
3935:
3933:
3929:
3923:
3920:
3916:
3913:
3912:
3911:
3908:
3906:
3902:
3899:
3898:
3896:
3892:
3886:
3883:
3881:
3878:
3876:
3873:
3871:
3868:
3866:
3865:Display rules
3863:
3861:
3858:
3856:
3853:
3852:
3850:
3848:
3844:
3836:
3835:Voice quality
3833:
3831:
3828:
3826:
3823:
3821:
3818:
3816:
3813:
3811:
3808:
3806:
3803:
3802:
3801:
3798:
3796:
3793:
3791:
3788:
3787:
3785:
3783:
3779:
3773:
3770:
3768:
3765:
3763:
3760:
3756:
3753:
3751:
3748:
3747:
3746:
3743:
3741:
3738:
3736:
3733:
3731:
3728:
3726:
3723:
3719:
3716:
3714:
3711:
3710:
3709:
3706:
3702:
3699:
3697:
3694:
3692:
3689:
3688:
3687:
3684:
3682:
3679:
3677:
3673:
3672:Body language
3670:
3668:
3665:
3664:
3662:
3658:
3654:
3650:
3645:
3641:
3637:
3630:
3625:
3623:
3618:
3616:
3611:
3610:
3607:
3600:
3596:
3592:
3589:
3587:
3586:9780415217057
3583:
3579:
3575:
3571:
3567:
3564:
3560:
3557:
3553:
3551:
3550:9780262611435
3547:
3543:
3539:
3535:
3532:Kunda, Ziva.
3531:
3528:
3525:
3521:
3518:
3514:
3511:
3509:
3508:9780761942184
3505:
3501:
3497:
3493:
3489:
3487:
3486:9781405110709
3483:
3479:
3475:
3471:
3467:
3463:
3460:
3457:
3453:
3449:
3445:
3444:
3438:
3435:
3433:
3430:
3429:
3424:
3419:
3404:
3398:
3389:
3383:
3379:
3375:
3370:
3362:
3348:
3344:
3343:"APA PsycNet"
3338:
3330:
3326:
3322:
3318:
3314:
3310:
3306:
3302:
3295:
3287:
3283:
3279:
3275:
3271:
3267:
3264:(2): 130–44.
3263:
3259:
3251:
3242:
3237:
3233:
3229:
3224:
3219:
3215:
3211:
3207:
3200:
3192:
3188:
3184:
3180:
3176:
3172:
3169:(6): 509–17.
3168:
3164:
3157:
3149:
3145:
3141:
3137:
3133:
3129:
3125:
3121:
3117:
3113:
3106:
3098:
3094:
3089:
3084:
3080:
3076:
3072:
3068:
3065:(s2): 31028.
3064:
3060:
3056:
3049:
3035:
3031:
3030:"APA PsycNet"
3025:
3017:
3013:
3008:
3003:
2999:
2995:
2991:
2984:
2976:
2972:
2968:
2964:
2961:(6): 562–71.
2960:
2956:
2948:
2940:
2936:
2932:
2928:
2924:
2920:
2916:
2912:
2905:
2897:
2893:
2889:
2885:
2881:
2877:
2874:(2): 157–66.
2873:
2869:
2862:
2854:
2850:
2846:
2842:
2838:
2834:
2829:
2824:
2821:(5): 640–56.
2820:
2816:
2809:
2801:
2797:
2793:
2789:
2785:
2781:
2778:(4): 247–61.
2777:
2773:
2766:
2758:
2752:
2748:
2741:
2733:
2727:
2722:
2721:
2712:
2704:
2700:
2696:
2690:
2686:
2682:
2678:
2674:
2670:
2666:
2659:
2651:
2647:
2642:
2637:
2632:
2627:
2623:
2619:
2615:
2611:
2607:
2600:
2592:
2588:
2584:
2580:
2575:
2570:
2566:
2562:
2555:
2547:
2543:
2539:
2535:
2531:
2527:
2523:
2519:
2512:
2510:
2501:
2497:
2493:
2489:
2484:
2479:
2475:
2471:
2467:
2461:
2459:
2450:
2446:
2442:
2438:
2434:
2430:
2426:
2422:
2415:
2413:
2404:
2397:
2389:
2382:
2380:
2378:
2370:
2364:
2358:
2354:
2348:
2342:
2338:
2332:
2326:
2322:
2316:
2308:
2304:
2300:
2296:
2292:
2288:
2284:
2280:
2276:
2272:
2265:
2258:
2254:
2248:
2240:
2236:
2231:
2226:
2221:
2216:
2212:
2208:
2204:
2197:
2189:
2185:
2181:
2177:
2172:
2167:
2163:
2159:
2155:
2151:
2143:
2141:
2132:
2128:
2124:
2120:
2116:
2112:
2108:
2104:
2097:
2095:
2086:
2082:
2077:
2072:
2068:
2064:
2060:
2056:
2052:
2045:
2043:
2034:
2030:
2025:
2020:
2016:
2012:
2008:
2004:
2000:
1993:
1991:
1983:
1977:
1970:
1964:
1957:
1951:
1944:
1938:
1931:
1925:
1918:
1912:
1905:
1899:
1892:
1886:
1879:
1873:
1867:
1863:
1857:
1855:
1853:
1851:
1849:
1839:
1834:
1830:
1826:
1822:
1815:
1813:
1811:
1809:
1807:
1799:
1795:
1789:
1787:
1785:
1783:
1781:
1779:
1777:
1769:
1762:
1755:
1751:
1745:
1738:
1734:
1728:
1722:
1718:
1712:
1705:
1701:
1695:
1688:
1684:
1678:
1670:
1664:
1660:
1656:
1649:
1641:
1635:
1631:
1626:
1625:
1616:
1614:
1612:
1603:
1601:9788131760000
1597:
1593:
1589:
1582:
1574:
1568:
1564:
1557:
1549:
1545:
1541:
1537:
1533:
1529:
1524:
1519:
1515:
1511:
1504:
1496:
1492:
1488:
1484:
1480:
1476:
1469:
1458:
1454:
1450:
1446:
1442:
1439:(6): 829–43.
1438:
1434:
1427:
1420:
1412:
1406:
1402:
1398:
1391:
1389:
1380:
1376:
1371:
1366:
1361:
1356:
1352:
1348:
1344:
1337:
1335:
1326:
1320:
1316:
1312:
1305:
1303:
1295:
1289:
1281:
1277:
1272:
1267:
1263:
1259:
1254:
1249:
1245:
1241:
1237:
1230:
1226:
1216:
1213:
1211:
1208:
1206:
1203:
1201:
1198:
1196:
1193:
1191:
1188:
1186:
1183:
1181:
1178:
1176:
1173:
1171:
1168:
1166:
1163:
1161:
1158:
1156:
1153:
1151:
1148:
1146:
1143:
1141:
1138:
1136:
1133:
1131:
1128:
1126:
1123:
1122:
1115:
1113:
1109:
1105:
1100:
1097:
1093:
1089:
1085:
1081:
1077:
1073:
1069:
1068:mood disorder
1065:
1061:
1057:
1052:
1050:
1046:
1042:
1041:temporal lobe
1038:
1034:
1030:
1026:
1020:
1010:
1008:
1004:
1000:
995:
993:
989:
984:
981:
977:
971:
969:
959:
950:
941:
932:
923:
914:
912:
908:
904:
900:
895:
890:
888:
882:
879:
875:
871:
866:
863:
859:
855:
851:
847:
846:schema theory
843:
833:
829:
827:
823:
818:
814:
810:
809:communication
806:
802:
798:
788:
786:
781:
777:
772:
770:
766:
762:
758:
754:
750:
746:
742:
738:
734:
730:
726:
722:
718:
714:
710:
706:
702:
692:
690:
686:
682:
681:schizophrenia
678:
674:
670:
666:
661:
659:
655:
651:
647:
642:
640:
636:
632:
621:
616:
614:
609:
607:
602:
601:
599:
598:
593:
583:
582:
581:
580:
571:
568:
566:
563:
561:
558:
556:
553:
551:
548:
546:
545:Psychologists
543:
541:
538:
536:
535:Organizations
533:
531:
528:
526:
523:
522:
517:
512:
511:
504:
503:Psychometrics
501:
499:
496:
494:
491:
489:
486:
484:
481:
479:
476:
474:
471:
469:
466:
464:
463:Consciousness
461:
459:
456:
454:
451:
449:
446:
444:
441:
439:
436:
434:
431:
430:
424:
423:
414:
411:
409:
406:
404:
401:
399:
396:
394:
391:
389:
386:
384:
383:Psychotherapy
381:
379:
378:Psychometrics
376:
374:
371:
369:
366:
364:
361:
359:
356:
354:
351:
349:
346:
344:
341:
339:
336:
334:
331:
329:
326:
324:
321:
319:
316:
314:
311:
309:
306:
304:
301:
299:
296:
294:
291:
289:
286:
284:
281:
279:
276:
274:
271:
269:
266:
264:
261:
259:
256:
254:
251:
250:
245:
240:
239:
230:
227:
225:
222:
220:
217:
215:
212:
210:
207:
205:
202:
200:
197:
195:
192:
190:
187:
185:
182:
180:
177:
175:
172:
170:
167:
165:
162:
160:
157:
155:
152:
150:
149:Developmental
147:
145:
142:
140:
137:
135:
132:
128:
125:
124:
123:
120:
118:
114:
111:
109:
106:
104:
101:
99:
96:
94:
91:
89:
86:
84:
81:
80:
75:
70:
69:
64:
61:
59:
56:
54:
51:
50:
49:
48:
44:
40:
39:
36:
33:
32:
28:
27:
22:
4188:Cold reading
4181:Applications
4155:Neuroanatomy
3800:Paralanguage
3598:
3594:
3569:
3562:
3555:
3533:
3526:
3516:
3513:Fiske, Susan
3491:
3469:
3447:
3422:
3402:
3397:
3373:
3361:
3350:. Retrieved
3346:
3337:
3304:
3300:
3294:
3261:
3257:
3250:
3213:
3209:
3199:
3166:
3162:
3156:
3115:
3111:
3105:
3062:
3058:
3048:
3037:. Retrieved
3033:
3024:
2997:
2993:
2983:
2958:
2954:
2947:
2914:
2910:
2904:
2871:
2867:
2861:
2818:
2814:
2808:
2775:
2771:
2765:
2746:
2740:
2719:
2711:
2668:
2658:
2613:
2609:
2599:
2564:
2560:
2554:
2529:
2525:
2522:Mesquita, B.
2516:Masuda, T.;
2473:
2469:
2424:
2420:
2402:
2396:
2387:
2368:
2363:
2352:
2347:
2336:
2331:
2320:
2315:
2274:
2270:
2264:
2256:
2252:
2247:
2210:
2206:
2196:
2153:
2149:
2106:
2102:
2058:
2054:
2006:
2002:
1981:
1976:
1968:
1963:
1955:
1950:
1945:11: 147-153.
1942:
1937:
1929:
1924:
1916:
1911:
1903:
1898:
1890:
1885:
1877:
1872:
1861:
1828:
1824:
1793:
1767:
1761:
1749:
1744:
1732:
1727:
1716:
1711:
1699:
1694:
1682:
1677:
1654:
1648:
1623:
1587:
1581:
1562:
1556:
1513:
1509:
1503:
1478:
1474:
1468:
1457:the original
1436:
1432:
1419:
1396:
1350:
1346:
1310:
1288:
1243:
1239:
1229:
1101:
1054:People with
1053:
1025:Phineas Gage
1022:
1007:rice farming
996:
988:Confucianism
985:
972:
965:
956:
947:
938:
929:
920:
899:social norms
891:
883:
867:
839:
830:
826:neurobiology
794:
773:
745:automaticity
717:attributions
698:
664:
662:
646:conspecifics
643:
630:
629:
488:Intelligence
219:Quantitative
184:Mathematical
179:Intelligence
169:Experimental
164:Evolutionary
154:Differential
4167:Limbic lobe
3932:Unconscious
3915:Missed call
3885:Social norm
3860:Conventions
3750:Eye contact
3554:Malle, B..
2665:Gillath, O.
2403:Remembering
2321:Neuroimage,
2156:: 425–436.
1831:(4): 1–17.
1630:McGraw-Hill
858:categorized
791:Development
769:behaviorism
721:stereotypes
685:psychopathy
530:Disciplines
403:Suicidology
298:Educational
253:Anomalistic
229:Theoretical
204:Personality
134:Comparative
117:Cognitivism
108:Behaviorism
4416:Categories
4300:Aggressive
4270:Paul Ekman
4253:Key people
4217:Technology
4203:Poker tell
4048:Social cue
3855:Chronemics
3805:Intonation
3649:Modalities
3578:0415217059
3542:0262611430
3500:0761942181
3478:1405110708
3456:0863778291
3352:2020-08-30
3039:2020-08-30
2868:NeuroImage
2685:2115/52726
2466:Masuda, T.
2390:. Pearson.
2259:(6), 1659.
2150:NeuroImage
2061:(1): 816.
2009:(1): 832.
1919:: 133-152.
1657:. London:
1222:References
1017:See also:
958:behavior.
917:Centrality
894:regulation
755:(schemas,
711:" such as
669:psychology
635:psychology
458:Competence
323:Humanistic
303:Ergonomics
288:Counseling
263:Assessment
199:Perception
159:Ecological
35:Psychology
4432:Cognition
4305:Assertive
4113:Fragile X
4098:Aprosodia
4091:Disorders
4038:Semiotics
3966:Deception
3772:Proxemics
3762:Olfaction
3745:Oculesics
3730:Imitation
3232:1664-1078
3132:1600-0447
3079:2000-8198
3016:144849027
2853:207724498
2823:CiteSeerX
2569:CiteSeerX
2478:CiteSeerX
2291:0033-3158
2213:: 82–91.
2109:: 54–62.
1932:56: 1-11.
1904:PloS one,
1518:CiteSeerX
1262:2314-6133
1110:) may be
1084:Fragile X
1064:psychosis
903:motivated
761:cognitive
741:attention
725:reasoning
663:The term
453:Cognition
368:Political
278:Community
113:Cognitive
63:Subfields
4135:Dyssemia
3981:Intimacy
3901:Emoticon
3810:Loudness
3740:Laughter
3676:Kinesics
3667:Blushing
3660:Physical
3329:24446270
3321:18633796
3278:20557225
3191:40061340
3148:35899724
3140:23662597
3097:27837580
2975:22664547
2931:28661076
2896:11846982
2888:10679187
2800:35269740
2703:53496958
2650:29959208
2591:12416925
2546:18284287
2500:21702819
2449:17739645
2441:11381831
2307:18853593
2299:21735073
2239:19415137
2180:28284802
2131:46859640
2123:29292232
2085:34188170
2033:37563301
2024:10415255
1540:10562726
1495:12564179
1453:11107878
1379:23444313
1280:26236723
1150:Language
1118:See also
1074:(PTSD),
1058:such as
992:Buddhism
878:behavior
870:salience
850:concepts
805:reflexes
565:Timeline
478:Feelings
473:Emotions
433:Behavior
427:Concepts
388:Religion
373:Positive
363:Pastoral
348:Military
313:Forensic
308:Feminist
293:Critical
283:Consumer
273:Coaching
268:Clinical
144:Cultural
83:Abnormal
4389:Subtext
4310:Passive
4279:Related
3870:Habitus
3815:Prosody
3767:Posture
3708:Gesture
3374:Infancy
3286:5132495
3241:9311421
3183:9932237
3088:5106867
2939:4306986
2845:9802997
2792:8657356
2641:6055178
2618:Bibcode
2230:2669642
2188:3807834
2076:8242020
1706:; 2019.
1689:. 1999.
1632:, Inc.
1548:7782899
1370:3580762
1271:4506840
1246:: 1–7.
1140:Empathy
907:inhibit
874:priming
765:beliefs
749:priming
713:schemas
695:History
540:Outline
413:Traffic
408:Systems
343:Medical
174:Gestalt
58:History
53:Outline
4363:Tadoma
4108:Autism
4063:Unsaid
4028:Nunchi
3905:Smiley
3825:Stress
3820:Rhythm
3790:Affect
3782:Speech
3595:et al.
3584:
3576:
3548:
3540:
3506:
3498:
3484:
3476:
3464:&
3454:
3420:about
3384:
3327:
3319:
3284:
3276:
3238:
3230:
3189:
3181:
3146:
3138:
3130:
3095:
3085:
3077:
3014:
2973:
2937:
2929:
2894:
2886:
2851:
2843:
2825:
2798:
2790:
2753:
2728:
2701:
2691:
2648:
2638:
2589:
2571:
2544:
2498:
2480:
2447:
2439:
2305:
2297:
2289:
2237:
2227:
2186:
2178:
2129:
2121:
2083:
2073:
2031:
2021:
1665:
1636:
1598:
1569:
1546:
1538:
1520:
1493:
1451:
1407:
1377:
1367:
1321:
1278:
1268:
1260:
1112:innate
1060:autism
862:schema
852:" are
824:, and
753:memory
751:) and
677:autism
570:Topics
393:School
318:Health
224:Social
127:Social
3894:Other
3378:182–3
3325:S2CID
3282:S2CID
3187:S2CID
3144:S2CID
3012:S2CID
2935:S2CID
2892:S2CID
2849:S2CID
2796:S2CID
2699:S2CID
2445:S2CID
2303:S2CID
2184:S2CID
2127:S2CID
1661:Ltd.
1544:S2CID
1460:(PDF)
1429:(PDF)
980:Japan
976:China
719:, or
516:Lists
353:Music
338:Media
333:Legal
189:Moral
4379:Mime
3830:Tone
3713:List
3582:ISBN
3574:ISBN
3546:ISBN
3538:ISBN
3504:ISBN
3496:ISBN
3482:ISBN
3474:ISBN
3452:ISBN
3382:ISBN
3317:PMID
3274:PMID
3228:ISSN
3179:PMID
3136:PMID
3128:ISSN
3093:PMID
3075:ISSN
2971:PMID
2927:PMID
2884:PMID
2841:PMID
2788:PMID
2751:ISBN
2726:ISBN
2689:ISBN
2646:PMID
2587:PMID
2542:PMID
2496:PMID
2437:PMID
2295:PMID
2287:ISSN
2235:PMID
2176:PMID
2119:PMID
2081:PMID
2029:PMID
1663:ISBN
1634:ISBN
1596:ISBN
1567:ISBN
1536:PMID
1491:PMID
1449:PMID
1405:ISBN
1375:PMID
1319:ISBN
1276:PMID
1258:ISSN
1244:2015
1092:ADHD
1090:and
990:and
978:and
872:and
778:and
747:and
735:and
683:and
671:and
656:and
493:Mind
3309:doi
3266:doi
3236:PMC
3218:doi
3171:doi
3120:doi
3116:129
3083:PMC
3067:doi
3002:doi
2963:doi
2919:doi
2876:doi
2833:doi
2780:doi
2681:hdl
2673:doi
2636:PMC
2626:doi
2614:115
2579:doi
2534:doi
2488:doi
2429:doi
2425:108
2279:doi
2275:219
2225:PMC
2215:doi
2166:hdl
2158:doi
2154:152
2111:doi
2107:133
2071:PMC
2063:doi
2019:PMC
2011:doi
1833:doi
1528:doi
1483:doi
1441:doi
1437:126
1365:PMC
1355:doi
1266:PMC
1248:doi
1051:.
905:to
828:.
815:of
739:),
4418::
4165:/
3903:/
3674:/
3580:,
3544:,
3515:.
3502:,
3480:,
3468:.
3380:.
3372:.
3345:.
3323:.
3315:.
3303:.
3280:.
3272:.
3262:73
3260:.
3234:.
3226:.
3216:.
3214:13
3212:.
3208:.
3185:.
3177:.
3167:28
3165:.
3142:.
3134:.
3126:.
3114:.
3091:.
3081:.
3073:.
3061:.
3057:.
3032:.
3010:.
2996:.
2992:.
2969:.
2959:69
2957:.
2933:.
2925:.
2915:47
2913:.
2890:.
2882:.
2872:11
2870:.
2847:.
2839:.
2831:.
2819:10
2817:.
2794:.
2786:.
2776:34
2774:.
2697:.
2687:.
2679:.
2644:.
2634:.
2624:.
2612:.
2608:.
2585:.
2577:.
2565:83
2563:.
2540:.
2530:94
2528:.
2520:;
2508:^
2494:.
2486:.
2474:30
2472:.
2457:^
2443:.
2435:.
2423:.
2411:^
2376:^
2301:.
2293:.
2285:.
2273:.
2257:79
2255:,
2233:.
2223:.
2209:.
2205:.
2182:.
2174:.
2164:.
2152:.
2139:^
2125:.
2117:.
2105:.
2093:^
2079:.
2069:.
2057:.
2053:.
2041:^
2027:.
2017:.
2005:.
2001:.
1989:^
1847:^
1827:.
1823:.
1805:^
1775:^
1628:.
1610:^
1594:.
1590:.
1542:.
1534:.
1526:.
1512:.
1489:.
1479:57
1477:.
1447:.
1435:.
1431:.
1399:.
1387:^
1373:.
1363:.
1349:.
1345:.
1333:^
1317:.
1313:.
1301:^
1274:.
1264:.
1256:.
1242:.
1238:.
1086:,
1082:,
1078:,
1070:,
1066:,
1062:,
771:.
731:,
715:,
679:,
3628:e
3621:t
3614:v
3392:.
3390:.
3355:.
3331:.
3311::
3305:1
3288:.
3268::
3244:.
3220::
3193:.
3173::
3150:.
3122::
3099:.
3069::
3063:7
3042:.
3018:.
3004::
2998:4
2977:.
2965::
2941:.
2921::
2898:.
2878::
2855:.
2835::
2802:.
2782::
2759:.
2734:.
2705:.
2683::
2675::
2652:.
2628::
2620::
2593:.
2581::
2548:.
2536::
2502:.
2490::
2451:.
2431::
2309:.
2281::
2241:.
2217::
2211:2
2190:.
2168::
2160::
2133:.
2113::
2087:.
2065::
2059:4
2035:.
2013::
2007:6
1841:.
1835::
1829:7
1800:.
1756:.
1739:.
1671:.
1642:.
1604:.
1575:.
1550:.
1530::
1514:3
1497:.
1485::
1443::
1413:.
1381:.
1357::
1351:4
1327:.
1296:)
1282:.
1250::
743:(
727:(
619:e
612:t
605:v
115:/
23:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.