Adolphs Ralph
California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, California 91125, USA.
Annu Rev Psychol. 2009;60:693-716. doi: 10.1146/annurev.psych.60.110707.163514.
Social cognition in humans is distinguished by psychological processes that allow us to make inferences about what is going on inside other people-their intentions, feelings, and thoughts. Some of these processes likely account for aspects of human social behavior that are unique, such as our culture and civilization. Most schemes divide social information processing into those processes that are relatively automatic and driven by the stimuli, versus those that are more deliberative and controlled, and sensitive to context and strategy. These distinctions are reflected in the neural structures that underlie social cognition, where there is a recent wealth of data primarily from functional neuroimaging. Here I provide a broad survey of the key abilities, processes, and ways in which to relate these to data from cognitive neuroscience.
人类的社会认知具有一些心理过程,这些过程使我们能够推断他人内心的想法——他们的意图、情感和思想。其中一些过程可能解释了人类社会行为中独特的方面,比如我们的文化和文明。大多数理论将社会信息处理分为相对自动且由刺激驱动的过程,以及更具深思熟虑和控制性、对情境和策略敏感的过程。这些区别反映在社会认知背后的神经结构中,近期有大量主要来自功能神经成像的数据。在这里,我对关键能力、过程以及将这些与认知神经科学数据相关联的方式进行了广泛的综述。