id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_iq4wcvekdrd2nazhgu2yay3k6u Robert P. Spunt Mirroring, Mentalizing, and the Social Neuroscience of Listening 2013 13 .pdf application/pdf 7197 890 65 Mirroring, Mentalizing, and the Social Neuroscience of Listening dynamic interaction of mirroring and mentalizing processes may be pivotal for successful listening social cognitive processes that, along with speech comprehension, likely play a major role in successful listening: perceiving the nonverbal behaviors, such as facial expression, that accompany Given that speech produces head motion, behavioral measurements are typically limited to manual responses, a fact that poses problems for researchers interested in studying social neuroimaging evidence for theories of highly complex psychological processes such as listening. Mirror neurons are believed to provide support for a theory of social cognition termed embodied simulation (Bastiaansen, Thioux, & Keysers, 2009; Gallese, 2007; Niedenthal, Mermillod, how likely involves mirroring processes in the MNS and may be a critical part of empathic understanding (Preston & De Waal, 2002; Zaki, Weber, Bolger, & Ochsner, 2009). ./cache/work_iq4wcvekdrd2nazhgu2yay3k6u.pdf ./txt/work_iq4wcvekdrd2nazhgu2yay3k6u.txt