date: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z pdf:PDFVersion: 1.4 pdf:docinfo:title: Illuminating the dark matter of social neuroscience: Considering the problem of social interaction from philosophical, psychological, and neuroscientific perspectives xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: Successful human social interaction depends on our capacity to understand other people's mental states and to anticipate how they will react to our actions. dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.4 pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref package access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Illuminating the dark matter of social neuroscience: Considering the problem of social interaction from philosophical, psychological, and neuroscientific perspectives modified: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z cp:subject: Successful human social interaction depends on our capacity to understand other people's mental states and to anticipate how they will react to our actions. pdf:docinfo:subject: Successful human social interaction depends on our capacity to understand other people's mental states and to anticipate how they will react to our actions. pdf:docinfo:creator: Tania Singer meta:author: Tania Singer meta:creation-date: 2012-06-16T12:57:03Z created: 2012-06-16T12:57:03Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true Creation-Date: 2012-06-16T12:57:03Z Author: Tania Singer producer: Acrobat Distiller 8.0.0 (Windows) pdf:docinfo:producer: Acrobat Distiller 8.0.0 (Windows) pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 dc:description: Successful human social interaction depends on our capacity to understand other people's mental states and to anticipate how they will react to our actions. Keywords: mentalizing, online/offline social cognition, second-person perspective, simulation, social interaction, social neuroscience, stimulus independent thoughts, theory-theory access_permission:modify_annotations: true dc:creator: Tania Singer description: Successful human social interaction depends on our capacity to understand other people's mental states and to anticipate how they will react to our actions. dcterms:created: 2012-06-16T12:57:03Z Last-Modified: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z dcterms:modified: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z title: Illuminating the dark matter of social neuroscience: Considering the problem of social interaction from philosophical, psychological, and neuroscientific perspectives xmpMM:DocumentID: uuid:169ccb9f-5084-4a00-8e9b-cae63994fe8b Last-Save-Date: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z pdf:docinfo:keywords: mentalizing, online/offline social cognition, second-person perspective, simulation, social interaction, social neuroscience, stimulus independent thoughts, theory-theory pdf:docinfo:modified: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z meta:save-date: 2012-06-19T09:34:32Z Content-Type: application/pdf X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Tania Singer dc:subject: mentalizing, online/offline social cognition, second-person perspective, simulation, social interaction, social neuroscience, stimulus independent thoughts, theory-theory access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 15 pdf:charsPerPage: 4381 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: mentalizing, online/offline social cognition, second-person perspective, simulation, social interaction, social neuroscience, stimulus independent thoughts, theory-theory access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:created: 2012-06-16T12:57:03Z