Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
about
Neural mechanisms of social dominanceNonverbal generics: human infants interpret objects as symbols of object kinds.Infants help a non-human agentChildren use nonverbal cues to make inferences about social powerEarly emerging system for reasoning about the social nature of food.Rudimentary sympathy in preverbal infants: preference for others in distressGiving and taking: representational building blocks of active resource-transfer events in human infantsInfants use relative numerical group size to infer social dominance.Human infants' learning of social structures: the case of dominance hierarchyEpigenetic DNA Methylation Linked to Social DominanceNeural and Behavioral Evidence for Infants' Sensitivity to the Trustworthiness of Faces.Social information changes the brain.Inferring character from faces: a developmental study.Preferences for group dominance track and mediate the effects of macro-level social inequality and violence across societies.Understanding social hierarchies: The neural and psychological foundations of status perception.Children Use Wealth Cues to Evaluate Others.Short- and long-run goals in ultimatum bargaining: impatience predicts spite-based behavior.Who's the Boss? Concepts of Social Power Across Development.Children and Adults Use Physical Size and Numerical Alliances in Third-Party Judgments of Dominance.Neural substrates of social status inference: roles of medial prefrontal cortex and superior temporal sulcus.Infants' representations of same and different in match- and non-match-to-sample.Competition as rational action: why young children cannot appreciate competitive gamesTransitive inference of social dominance by human infants.The epigenetic impacts of social stress: how does social adversity become biologically embedded?The Origins of Social Categorization.The influence of power and reason on young Maya children's endorsement of testimony.Hierarchy, Dominance, and Deliberation: Egalitarian Values Require Mental Effort.Rank acquisition in rhesus macaque yearlings following permanent maternal separation: The importance of the social and physical environment.Human infants' understanding of social imitation: Inferences of affiliation from third party observations.Partner choice, fairness, and the extension of morality.The spatial representation of power in children.'To the victor go the spoils': Infants expect resources to align with dominance structures.The cradle of social knowledge: Infants' reasoning about caregiving and affiliation.Preverbal Infants Infer Third-Party Social Relationships Based on Language.13-month-olds' understanding of social interactions.Northern = smart and Southern = nice: the development of accent attitudes in the United States.Children infer affiliative and status relations from watching others imitate.Friends or foes: infants use shared evaluations to infer others' social relationships.Transfer of Social Learning Across Contexts: Exploring Infants' Attribution of Trait-Like Emotions to Adults
P2860
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P2860
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
description
2012 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2012 թուականի Ապրիլին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2012 թվականի ապրիլին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2012年の論文
@ja
2012年論文
@yue
2012年論文
@zh-hant
2012年論文
@zh-hk
2012年論文
@zh-mo
2012年論文
@zh-tw
2012年论文
@wuu
name
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@ast
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@en
type
label
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@ast
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@en
prefLabel
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@ast
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@en
P2860
P356
P1476
Representation of stable social dominance relations by human infants.
@en
P2093
Gergely Csibra
Olivier Mascaro
P2860
P304
P356
10.1073/PNAS.1113194109
P407
P577
2012-04-16T00:00:00Z