Image for Agency and joint attention

Agency and joint attention

Metcalfe, Janet(Edited by)Terrace, Herbert S.(Edited by)
See all formats and editions

Human infants do not seem to be born with concepts of self or joint attention.

One basic goal of Agency and Joint Attention is to unravel how these abilities originate.

One approach that has received a lot of recent attention is social.

Some argue that by virtue of an infant's intense eye gaze with her mother, she is able, by the age of four months, to establish a relationship with her mother that differentiates between "me" and "you." At about twelve months, theinfant acquires the non-verbal ability to share attention with her mother or other caregivers.

Although the concepts of self and joint attention are nonverbal and uniquely human, the question remains, how do we establish metacognitive control of these abilities?

A tangential question is whether nonhumananimals develop abilities that are analogous to self and joint attention.

Much of this volume is devoted to the development of metacognition of self and joint attention in experiments on the origin of consciousness, knowing oneself, social referencing, joint action, the neurological basis of joint attention, the role of joint action, mirror neurons, phenomenology, and cues for agency.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£460.40
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0199988358 / 9780199988358
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
153.733
19/09/2013
English
357 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%