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      Two-Person Neuroscience and Naturalistic Social Communication: The Role of Language and Linguistic Variables in Brain-Coupling Research

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          Abstract

          Social cognitive neuroscience (SCN) seeks to understand the brain mechanisms through which we comprehend others’ emotions and intentions in order to react accordingly. For decades, SCN has explored relevant domains by exposing individual participants to predesigned stimuli and asking them to judge their social (e.g., emotional) content. Subjects are thus reduced to detached observers of situations that they play no active role in. However, the core of our social experience is construed through real-time interactions requiring the active negotiation of information with other people. To gain more relevant insights into the workings of the social brain, the incipient field of two-person neuroscience (2PN) advocates the study of brain-to-brain coupling through multi-participant experiments. In this paper, we argue that the study of online language-based communication constitutes a cornerstone of 2PN. First, we review preliminary evidence illustrating how verbal interaction may shed light on the social brain. Second, we advance methodological recommendations to design experiments within language-based 2PN. Finally, we formulate outstanding questions for future research.

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          Most cited references36

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          Brain-to-brain coupling: a mechanism for creating and sharing a social world.

          Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the coordination of actions among individuals according to a shared set of rules. Despite the central role of other individuals in shaping one's mind, most cognitive studies focus on processes that occur within a single individual. We call for a shift from a single-brain to a multi-brain frame of reference. We argue that in many cases the neural processes in one brain are coupled to the neural processes in another brain via the transmission of a signal through the environment. Brain-to-brain coupling constrains and shapes the actions of each individual in a social network, leading to complex joint behaviors that could not have emerged in isolation. Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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            An integrated theory of language production and comprehension.

            Currently, production and comprehension are regarded as quite distinct in accounts of language processing. In rejecting this dichotomy, we instead assert that producing and understanding are interwoven, and that this interweaving is what enables people to predict themselves and each other. We start by noting that production and comprehension are forms of action and action perception. We then consider the evidence for interweaving in action, action perception, and joint action, and explain such evidence in terms of prediction. Specifically, we assume that actors construct forward models of their actions before they execute those actions, and that perceivers of others' actions covertly imitate those actions, then construct forward models of those actions. We use these accounts of action, action perception, and joint action to develop accounts of production, comprehension, and interactive language. Importantly, they incorporate well-defined levels of linguistic representation (such as semantics, syntax, and phonology). We show (a) how speakers and comprehenders use covert imitation and forward modeling to make predictions at these levels of representation, (b) how they interweave production and comprehension processes, and (c) how they use these predictions to monitor the upcoming utterances. We show how these accounts explain a range of behavioral and neuroscientific data on language processing and discuss some of the implications of our proposal.
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              Solving the emotion paradox: categorization and the experience of emotion.

              In this article, I introduce an emotion paradox: People believe that they know an emotion when they see it, and as a consequence assume that emotions are discrete events that can be recognized with some degree of accuracy, but scientists have yet to produce a set of clear and consistent criteria for indicating when an emotion is present and when it is not. I propose one solution to this paradox: People experience an emotion when they conceptualize an instance of affective feeling. In this view, the experience of emotion is an act of categorization, guided by embodied knowledge about emotion. The result is a model of emotion experience that has much in common with the social psychological literature on person perception and with literature on embodied conceptual knowledge as it has recently been applied to social psychology.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                URI : http://frontiersin.org/people/u/141631
                URI : http://frontiersin.org/people/u/8172
                Journal
                Front Psychiatry
                Front Psychiatry
                Front. Psychiatry
                Frontiers in Psychiatry
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1664-0640
                21 August 2014
                05 September 2014
                2014
                : 5
                : 124
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Laboratory of Experimental Psychology and Neuroscience (LPEN), Institute of Cognitive Neurology (INECO), Favaloro University , Buenos Aires, Argentina
                [2] 2National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) , Buenos Aires, Argentina
                [3] 3School of Languages, National University of Córdoba , Córdoba, Argentina
                [4] 4UDP-INECO Foundation Core on Neuroscience (UIFCoN), Diego Portales University , Santiago, Chile
                [5] 5Universidad Autónoma del Caribe , Barranquilla, Colombia
                [6] 6Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders , Sydney, NSW, Australia
                Author notes

                Edited by: Pablo Billeke, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile

                Reviewed by: Tomas Ossandon, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile, Chile; Ali Torkamani, University of California San Diego, USA

                *Correspondence: Agustín Ibáñez, INECO, Pacheco de Melo 1854/60, C1126AAB, Buenos Aires, Argentina e-mail: aibanez@ 123456ineco.org.ar

                This article was submitted to Systems Biology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychiatry.

                Article
                10.3389/fpsyt.2014.00124
                4155792
                25249986
                2d7d03ee-fa61-4f8d-ad58-459ab32d7957
                Copyright © 2014 García and Ibáñez.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 22 July 2014
                : 22 August 2014
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 1, Equations: 0, References: 58, Pages: 6, Words: 5331
                Categories
                Psychiatry
                Perspective Article

                Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry
                social cognition,two-person neuroscience,interpersonal communication,language,dialog

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