What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
about
The neural basis of conceptualizing the same action at different levels of abstractionFrom agents to objects: sexist attitudes and neural responses to sexualized targetsCultural relativity in perceiving emotion from vocalizationsLarge-scale brain networks in affective and social neuroscience: towards an integrative functional architecture of the brainThe neural substrates of action identification.Perceptions of intentionality for goal-related action: behavioral description matters.The impact of power on humanity: self-dehumanization in powerlessness.Emotion words shape emotion percepts.Construal level and free will beliefs shape perceptions of actors' proximal and distal intent.Mental simulation and meaning in lifeMind Perception Is the Essence of MoralityPerceptions of emotion from facial expressions are not culturally universal: evidence from a remote cultureSpatiotemporal Brain Dynamics of Empathy for Pain and Happiness in Friendship.Learning about what others were doing: verb aspect and attributions of mundane and criminal intent for past actions.Interpersonal Similarity as a Social Distance Dimension: Implications for Perception of Others' ActionsTheory of Mind experience sampling in typical adultsUsing vignettes to explore judgements of patients about safety and quality of care: the role of outcome and relationship with the care provider.What do infants understand of others' action? A theoretical account of early social cognition.There Are Many Ways to See the Forest for the Trees: A Tour Guide for Abstraction.Who Sees Human? The Stability and Importance of Individual Differences in Anthropomorphism.Identifying the what, why, and how of an observed action: an fMRI study of mentalizing and mechanizing during action observation.Humanness beliefs about behavior: an index and comparative human-nonhuman behavior judgments.Dissociable neural systems support retrieval of how and why action knowledge.Registered Replication Report: Hart & Albarracín (2011).Mind attributions about moral actors: intentionality is greater given coherent cues.Action mirroring and action understanding: an ideomotor and attentional account.Don't mind meat? The denial of mind to animals used for human consumption.Thoughts versus deeds: distal and proximal intent in lay judgments of moral responsibility.The blame game: the effect of responsibility and social stigma on empathy for pain.Social categorization of social robots: anthropomorphism as a function of robot group membership.Universality Reconsidered: Diversity in Making Meaning of Facial Expressions
P2860
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P2860
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
description
2006 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2006年の論文
@ja
2006年学术文章
@wuu
2006年学术文章
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2006年学术文章
@zh-cn
2006年学术文章
@zh-hans
2006年学术文章
@zh-my
2006年学术文章
@zh-sg
2006年學術文章
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2006年學術文章
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name
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@en
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@nl
type
label
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@en
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@nl
prefLabel
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@en
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@nl
P2093
P1476
What do I think you're doing? Action identification and mind attribution.
@en
P2093
Abigail A Marsh
Daniel M Wegner
Megan N Kozak
P304
P356
10.1037/0022-3514.90.4.543
P577
2006-04-01T00:00:00Z