Social Neuroscience: Measuring and Quantifying Human Empathy
One of the most exciting areas of neuroscience involves the exploration of the biological and physiological underpinnings of human social interaction. And as researchers discover more and more about the critical role that mirror neurons appear to play in our lives, the relatively new field of “social neuroscience” is rapidly becoming the central front from which we examine how the brain influences social behavior, and vice versa.
In this podcast, we speak with Dr. Carl Marci who is the Director of Social Neuroscience for the Psychotherapy Research Program at the Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Psychiatry. Dr. Marci is involved with some of the most advanced research that focuses on measuring and quantifying the human emotion of empathy.
Be sure to listen in on this podcast where we discuss a promising new development in the one of the hottest areas of neuroscience today. (Originally broadcast 30-November-2008)
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Offering multiple perspectives from many fields of human inquiry that may move all of us toward a more integrated understanding of who we are as conscious beings.
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Neuroscene: Social Neuroscience: Measuring and Quantifying Human Empathy
A cool podcast from Neuroscene on social neuroscience - it's a repost of a discussion from 2008, but it's new to me and still quite interesting.
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Labels:
brain,
interpersonal,
mind,
Psychology,
sociology
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