Academia.eduAcademia.edu

Attention, joint attention, and social cognition

2007

Abstract

ABSTRACT—Before social cognition there is joint processing of information about the attention of self and others. This joint attention requires the integrated activation of a dis-tributed cortical network involving the anterior and poste-rior attention systems. In infancy, practice with the integrated activation of this distributed attention network is amajor contributor to the development of social cognition. Thus, the functional neuroanatomies of social cognition and the anterior–posterior attention systems have much in common. These propositions have implications for under-standing joint attention, social cognition, and autism. KEYWORDS—attention; joint attention; cognitive neuro-science; autism; interconnectivity Infants follow the direction of other people’s gaze in the first year of life (Scaife & Bruner, 1975). This seminal observation led to a