Taking the first-person perspective (1PP) centered upon one's own body as opposed to the third-person perspective (3PP), which enables us to take the viewpoint of someone else, is constitutive for human self-consciousness. At the underlying representational or cognitive level, these operations are processed in an egocentric reference frame, where locations are represented centered around another person's (3PP) or one's own perspective (1PP). To study 3PP and 1PP, both operating in egocentric frames, a virtual scene with an avatar and red balls in a room was presented from different camera viewpoints to normal volunteers (n = 11) in a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment. The task for the subjects was to count the objects as seen...
The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) appears to play a prominent role in two fundamental aspects of s...
Empathy refers to our capacity to share and understand the emotional states of others. It relies on ...
Abstract Humans spontaneously take the perspective of others when encoding spatial information in a ...
& Taking the first-person perspective (1PP) centered upon one’s own body as opposed to the third...
Human self-consciousness depends on the meta-representation of mental and bodily states as one's own...
Human self-consciousness relies on the ability to distinguish between oneself and others. We sought ...
Visual perspective taking is a fundamental feature of the human social brain. Previous research has ...
Taking another person's viewpoint and making sense of their actions are key processes that guide soc...
Visual self-body recognition is one of the fundamental cognitive functions, and a major contributor ...
Neuroimaging studies have thoroughly investigated brain regions that are recruited when we put ourse...
The ability to imagine the world from a different viewpoint is a fundamental competence for spatial ...
Recent functional neuroimaging evidence suggests that recalling autobiographical memories, imagining...
Human self-consciousness as the metarepresentation of ones own mental states and the so-called theor...
Self-consciousness has mostly been approached by philosophical enquiry and not by empirical neurosci...
AbstractThe ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) has been implicated in studies of both executive...
The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) appears to play a prominent role in two fundamental aspects of s...
Empathy refers to our capacity to share and understand the emotional states of others. It relies on ...
Abstract Humans spontaneously take the perspective of others when encoding spatial information in a ...
& Taking the first-person perspective (1PP) centered upon one’s own body as opposed to the third...
Human self-consciousness depends on the meta-representation of mental and bodily states as one's own...
Human self-consciousness relies on the ability to distinguish between oneself and others. We sought ...
Visual perspective taking is a fundamental feature of the human social brain. Previous research has ...
Taking another person's viewpoint and making sense of their actions are key processes that guide soc...
Visual self-body recognition is one of the fundamental cognitive functions, and a major contributor ...
Neuroimaging studies have thoroughly investigated brain regions that are recruited when we put ourse...
The ability to imagine the world from a different viewpoint is a fundamental competence for spatial ...
Recent functional neuroimaging evidence suggests that recalling autobiographical memories, imagining...
Human self-consciousness as the metarepresentation of ones own mental states and the so-called theor...
Self-consciousness has mostly been approached by philosophical enquiry and not by empirical neurosci...
AbstractThe ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) has been implicated in studies of both executive...
The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) appears to play a prominent role in two fundamental aspects of s...
Empathy refers to our capacity to share and understand the emotional states of others. It relies on ...
Abstract Humans spontaneously take the perspective of others when encoding spatial information in a ...