Attending to and neglecting people: bridging neuroscience, psychology and sociology

Author:

Hari Riitta12,Sams Mikko2,Nummenmaa Lauri2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Art, School of Arts, Design and Architecture, Aalto University, PO Box 31000, 00076 AALTO, Helsinki, Finland

2. Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering, Aalto University, PO Box 31000, 00076 AALTO, Helsinki, Finland

Abstract

Human behaviour is context-dependent—based on predictions and influenced by the environment and other people. We live in a dynamic world where both the social stimuli and their context are constantly changing. Similar dynamic, natural stimuli should, in the future, be increasingly used to study social brain functions, with parallel development of appropriate signal-analysis methods. Understanding dynamic neural processes also requires accurate time-sensitive characterization of the behaviour. To go beyond the traditional stimulus–response approaches, brain activity should be recorded simultaneously from two interacting subjects to reveal why human social interaction is critically different from just reacting to each other. This theme issue on Attending to and neglecting people contains original work and review papers on person perception and social interaction. The articles cover research from neuroscience, psychology, robotics, animal interaction research and microsociology. Some of the papers are co-authored by scientists who presented their own, independent views in the recent Attention and Performance XXVI conference but were brave enough to join forces with a colleague having a different background and views. In the future, information needs to converge across disciplines to provide us a more holistic view of human behaviour, its interactive nature, as well as the temporal dynamics of our social world.

Funder

Suomen Akatemia

Seventh Framework Programme

European Research Council

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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