Description

Book Synopsis

Integrating cutting-edge research from multiple disciplines, this book provides a dynamic and holistic picture of the developing infant mind. Contributors explore the transactions among genes, the brain, and the environment in the earliest years of life. The volume probes the neural correlates of core sensory, perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and social capacities. It highlights the importance of early relationships, presenting compelling findings on how parent-infant interactions influence neural processing and brain maturation. Innovative research methods are discussed, including applications of behavioral, hormonal, genetic, and brain imaging technologies.



Trade Review

If you are looking for current research and ideas on the origins of the social mind and brain, this is the book. Prominent researchers provide thorough coverage of cutting-edge work in behavioral and developmental neuroscience. An excellent introduction to the field.--Philippe Rochat, PhD, Department of Psychology, Emory University

Legerstee, Haley, and Bornstein have put together a stunning volume on how the mind of the infant comes into being. Each chapter genuinely adds to our understanding of the process. The reader will come away with a more complex--and simultaneously coherent--understanding of how infants develop self-awareness and connect to the social world. It's no surprise that the book is as good as it is; each of the editors has made unique and major contributions to the field.--Ed Tronick, PhD, University Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of Massachusetts-Boston

This superlative book takes readers on a journey into the inner recesses of the infant mind, from the emergence of intersubjectivity to the growth of dynamic human thriving. Understanding these developments has required creative and meticulous behavioral observations by many investigators, whose work is summarized here. The volume illuminates the primary-process skills that allow infants to interact with supportive others, and shows how social learning shapes enculturated mental functions within infant brains. This volume is an exceptional text for graduate courses in human development as well as a sourcebook for anyone interested in the modern developmental sciences of human nature and nurture.--Jaak Panksepp, PhD, Baily Endowed Chair of Animal Well-Being Science, College of Veterinary Medicine, Washington State University

This impressive integrative volume furnishes a panoramic view of how the brain is rooted in early experiences, how the mind is formed from concrete action patterns and interpersonal exchanges, and how psychopathology is embedded in normative growth. A leading group of researchers charts a new agenda for developmental science. This book offers a unique frame for inquiry into questions that have baffled philosophers and scientists for centuries: What is it that makes us human, and how does it come about?--Ruth Feldman, PhD, Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Israel; Child Study Center, Yale University-Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.--Choice, 10/16/2013ƒƒ“This excellent collection provides the specialist with summaries of research in many of the subdisciplines of developmental neuroscience….A valuable addition to the developmental neuroscience literature.”--PsycCRITIQUES, 11/20/2013



Table of Contents

I. Evolutionary, Neural, and Philosophical Approaches to the Social Mind
1. An Evolutionary Basis for Social Cognition, Robin I. M. Dunbar
2. The Evolution of Motor Cognition: Its Role in the Development of Social Cognition and Implications for Autism Spectrum Disorder, Vittorio Gallese and Magali Rochat
3. When the Problem of Intersubjectivity Becomes the Solution, Shaun Gallagher
II. Social Experience and Epigenetic Mechanisms of Gene–Environment Interactions
4. Differential Susceptibility: Developmental and Evolutionary Mechanisms of Gene–Environment Interactions, Michael Pluess, Suzanne E. Stevens, and Jay Belsky
5. Variation in Empathy: The Interplay of Genetic and Environmental Factors, Ariel Knafo and Florina Uzefovsky
III. The Dynamic Role of Early Social Experience in Vision, Memory, and Language
6. Development of Brain Networks for Visual Social-Emotional Information Processing in Infancy, Michelle de Haan and Leslie J. Carver
7. Event Memory: Neural, Cognitive, and Social Influences on Early Development, Patricia J. Bauer
8. Biology of Shared Experience and Language Development: Regulations for the Intersubjective Life of Narratives, Colwyn Trevarthen and Jonathan Delafield-Butt
9. The Situated Infant: Learning in Context, Arlene Walker-Andrews, Sheila Krogh-Jespersen, Estelle Mayhew, and Carrie Coffield
IV. The Role of Early Experience in Social Development
10. The Developing Social Brain: Social Connections and Social Bonds, Social Loss, and Jealousy in Infancy, Maria Legerstee
11. Infant Memory Consolidation: The Social Context of Stress, Learning, and Memory, David W. Haley
12. Mother–Infant Attunement: A Multilevel Approach via Body, Brain, and Behavior, Marc H. Bornstein
V. Neural Processes of Mental Awareness
13. False-Belief Understanding in Infants and Preschoolers, Mark A. Sabbagh, Jeannette E. Benson, and Valerie A. Kuhlmeier
14. Neural Connectivity, Joint Attention, and the Social-Cognitive Deficits of Autism, Peter Mundy

The Infant Mind

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    RRP £74.99 – you save £3.75 (5%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 1 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Maria Legerstee, David W. Haley, Marc H. Bornstein

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      View other formats and editions of The Infant Mind by Maria Legerstee

      Publisher: Guilford Publications
      Publication Date: 18/03/2013
      ISBN13: 9781462508174, 978-1462508174
      ISBN10: 1462508170

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Integrating cutting-edge research from multiple disciplines, this book provides a dynamic and holistic picture of the developing infant mind. Contributors explore the transactions among genes, the brain, and the environment in the earliest years of life. The volume probes the neural correlates of core sensory, perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and social capacities. It highlights the importance of early relationships, presenting compelling findings on how parent-infant interactions influence neural processing and brain maturation. Innovative research methods are discussed, including applications of behavioral, hormonal, genetic, and brain imaging technologies.



      Trade Review

      If you are looking for current research and ideas on the origins of the social mind and brain, this is the book. Prominent researchers provide thorough coverage of cutting-edge work in behavioral and developmental neuroscience. An excellent introduction to the field.--Philippe Rochat, PhD, Department of Psychology, Emory University

      Legerstee, Haley, and Bornstein have put together a stunning volume on how the mind of the infant comes into being. Each chapter genuinely adds to our understanding of the process. The reader will come away with a more complex--and simultaneously coherent--understanding of how infants develop self-awareness and connect to the social world. It's no surprise that the book is as good as it is; each of the editors has made unique and major contributions to the field.--Ed Tronick, PhD, University Distinguished Professor of Psychology, University of Massachusetts-Boston

      This superlative book takes readers on a journey into the inner recesses of the infant mind, from the emergence of intersubjectivity to the growth of dynamic human thriving. Understanding these developments has required creative and meticulous behavioral observations by many investigators, whose work is summarized here. The volume illuminates the primary-process skills that allow infants to interact with supportive others, and shows how social learning shapes enculturated mental functions within infant brains. This volume is an exceptional text for graduate courses in human development as well as a sourcebook for anyone interested in the modern developmental sciences of human nature and nurture.--Jaak Panksepp, PhD, Baily Endowed Chair of Animal Well-Being Science, College of Veterinary Medicine, Washington State University

      This impressive integrative volume furnishes a panoramic view of how the brain is rooted in early experiences, how the mind is formed from concrete action patterns and interpersonal exchanges, and how psychopathology is embedded in normative growth. A leading group of researchers charts a new agenda for developmental science. This book offers a unique frame for inquiry into questions that have baffled philosophers and scientists for centuries: What is it that makes us human, and how does it come about?--Ruth Feldman, PhD, Gonda Multidisciplinary Brain Research Center, Bar-Ilan University, Israel; Child Study Center, Yale University-Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.--Choice, 10/16/2013ƒƒ“This excellent collection provides the specialist with summaries of research in many of the subdisciplines of developmental neuroscience….A valuable addition to the developmental neuroscience literature.”--PsycCRITIQUES, 11/20/2013



      Table of Contents

      I. Evolutionary, Neural, and Philosophical Approaches to the Social Mind
      1. An Evolutionary Basis for Social Cognition, Robin I. M. Dunbar
      2. The Evolution of Motor Cognition: Its Role in the Development of Social Cognition and Implications for Autism Spectrum Disorder, Vittorio Gallese and Magali Rochat
      3. When the Problem of Intersubjectivity Becomes the Solution, Shaun Gallagher
      II. Social Experience and Epigenetic Mechanisms of Gene–Environment Interactions
      4. Differential Susceptibility: Developmental and Evolutionary Mechanisms of Gene–Environment Interactions, Michael Pluess, Suzanne E. Stevens, and Jay Belsky
      5. Variation in Empathy: The Interplay of Genetic and Environmental Factors, Ariel Knafo and Florina Uzefovsky
      III. The Dynamic Role of Early Social Experience in Vision, Memory, and Language
      6. Development of Brain Networks for Visual Social-Emotional Information Processing in Infancy, Michelle de Haan and Leslie J. Carver
      7. Event Memory: Neural, Cognitive, and Social Influences on Early Development, Patricia J. Bauer
      8. Biology of Shared Experience and Language Development: Regulations for the Intersubjective Life of Narratives, Colwyn Trevarthen and Jonathan Delafield-Butt
      9. The Situated Infant: Learning in Context, Arlene Walker-Andrews, Sheila Krogh-Jespersen, Estelle Mayhew, and Carrie Coffield
      IV. The Role of Early Experience in Social Development
      10. The Developing Social Brain: Social Connections and Social Bonds, Social Loss, and Jealousy in Infancy, Maria Legerstee
      11. Infant Memory Consolidation: The Social Context of Stress, Learning, and Memory, David W. Haley
      12. Mother–Infant Attunement: A Multilevel Approach via Body, Brain, and Behavior, Marc H. Bornstein
      V. Neural Processes of Mental Awareness
      13. False-Belief Understanding in Infants and Preschoolers, Mark A. Sabbagh, Jeannette E. Benson, and Valerie A. Kuhlmeier
      14. Neural Connectivity, Joint Attention, and the Social-Cognitive Deficits of Autism, Peter Mundy

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