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Importance of body representations in social-cognitive development: New insights from infant brain science
Author(s) -
Andrew N. Meltzoff,
Peter J. Marshall
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
progress in brain research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.229
H-Index - 144
eISSN - 1875-7855
pISSN - 0079-6123
DOI - 10.1016/bs.pbr.2020.07.009
Subject(s) - psychology , imitation , cognition , social cognition , cognitive psychology , affordance , cognitive neuroscience , social neuroscience , cognitive development , cognitive science , developmental psychology , social psychology , neuroscience
There is significant interest in the ways the human body, both one's own and that of others, is represented in the human brain. In this chapter we focus on body representations in infancy and synthesize relevant findings from both infant cognitive neuroscience and behavioral experiments. We review six experiments in infant neuroscience that have used novel EEG and MEG methods to explore infant neural body maps. We then consider results from behavioral studies of social imitation and examine what they contribute to our understanding of infant body representations at a psychological level. Finally, we interweave both neuroscience and behavioral lines of research to ground new theoretical claims about early infant social cognition. We propose, based on the evidence, that young infants can represent the bodily acts of others and their own bodily acts in commensurate terms. Infants initially recognize correspondences between self and other-they perceive that others are "like me" in terms of bodies and bodily actions. This capacity for registering and using self-other equivalence mappings has far-reaching implications for mechanisms of developmental change. Infants can learn about the affordances and powers of their own body by watching adults' actions and their causal consequences. Reciprocally, infants can enrich their understanding of other people's internal states by taking into account the way they themselves feel when they perform similar acts. The faces, bodies, and matching actions of people are imbued with unique meaning because they can be mapped to the infant's own body and behavior.

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