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Development of Social Engagement, The: Neurobiological Perspectives


Development of Social Engagement, The: Neurobiological Perspectives

Hardback by Marshall, Peter J. (Assistant Professor of Psychology, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Temple University, USA); Fox, Nathan A. (Professor of Human Development, Professor of Human Development, University of Maryland, USA)

Development of Social Engagement, The: Neurobiological Perspectives

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ISBN:
9780195168716
Publication Date:
26 Jan 2006
Language:
English
Publisher:
Oxford University Press Inc
Pages:
450 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 May - 1 Jun 2024
Development of Social Engagement, The: Neurobiological Perspectives

Description

Recent advances in neuroscience have allowed researchers from various disciplines - developmental psychology, comparative psychology, and developmental psychopathology - to shed light on the neural systems involved in social engagement behaviours in both children and adults. The Development of Social Engagement presents the latest on the topic from each of these intersecting research areas. Developmental psychologists have long been interested in the constellation of behaviours that constitutes early social engagement in infants and young children. Renewed interest in this topic has been sparked by research applying new and innovative techniques to long-standing questions about the development of face processing, joint attention, language, and early social cognition. These developments have been mirrored by the growth of comparative work concerning the neurobiological correlates and determinants of social engagement behaviours across a range of non-human species. The chapters in this volume bring together work on all of these topics, including questions related to social systems, play, maternal behaviour, and evolutionary concerns. The volume also covers the recent application of rigorous biologically focused research paradigms to the study of atypical social engagement in children, both in terms of disorders such as autism and Williams Syndrome, and in terms of the effects of adverse early rearing environments (e.g., institutionalism). This book presents some of the latest research on social-engagement processes across a variety of disciplines that cover a range of life stages and species. It will provide both student and professional researchers with a taste of current research directions in this rapidly expanding field.

Contents

1. Biological Approaches to the Study of Social Engagement ; 2. Temperamental Exuberance: Correlates and Consequences ; 3. Neural Bases of Infants' Processing of Social Information in Faces ; 4. Joint Attention, Social Engagement and the Development of Social Competence ; 5. The Social Dimension in Language Development: A Rich History and a New Frontier ; 6. Neurocognitive Bases of Preschoolers' Theory-of-Mind Development: Integrating Cognitive Neuroscience and Cognitive Development ; 7. The Neurobiology of Social Bonds and Affiliation ; 8. The Neurobiology of Maternal Behaviour in Mammals ; 9. Play and the Development of Social Engagement: A Comparative Perspective ; 10. Evolutionary Perspectives on Social Engagement ; 11. Understanding Impairments in Social Engagement in Autism ; 12. Social Engagements in Williams Syndrome ; 13. The Psychological Effects of Early Institutional Rearing

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