We hope that this review article contributes to stimulating what we take to be a promising route of future research and applications of the science of ecologically rational, fastand-frugal heuristics. Acknowledgments We thank Rona Unrau for editing the manuscript. We thank Dorothee Schmid for helpful comments.
In the present article, we discuss the importance of integrating the self, self-awareness, and inter-subjectivity in models of social cognitive neuroscience and psychiatric research while striving to progress in the understanding and treatment of psychiatric disorders. The self is central to human cognition.1 It involves multiple levels of representation with the psychosocial
Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical function of articulating the individual with the group. A working definition of the self includes all real, imaginary, and symbolic essential qualities and personality traits2 that make a person Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical distinct from others, but also similar, not only by way of genes, but also group identification and belonging. Self-awareness may be defined by the ongoing cognition of being the agent and the owner of one’s own thoughts and actions www.selleckchem.com/products/PLX-4032.html through time, Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical and of having a self that is constantly concerned with one’s own perception and judgment, and those of others.3 We may define intersubjectivity as the interplay
among multiple self-awarenesses interacting in interpersonal relationships, as framed by human societies. The phenomena captured by these definitions and their corollaries can be further understood by
considering the self and self-awareness as parts of an evolutionary process that relates to the emergence of unique forms of interpersonal relationships Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical only known in human societies. Through evolution, the struggle for Inhibitors,research,lifescience,medical the self among humans has progressively gained a weight that is commensurate to, or greater than, the immediate struggle for survival. Challenging external and internal demands are imposed on the self because of the ongoing competitive and collaborative struggle for attention, love, and recognition. The self and self-awareness, PDK4 and therefore inter-subjective relationships are strongly determined developmental and through all stages of life by social (including family) interactions.4 They play a critical role in the way individuals cope with self-representation and influence each other through their patterns of projections.5 Thus, we suggest that basic (fear, sadness, anger, happiness, etc) and social (pride, embarrassment, shame, etc) emotions largely depend, in their elicitation and in the narrative that surrounds them, on the cognitive stance of the self situated in real, imaginary, or symbolic relationships with the physical and social context. Likewise, self-esteem represents a central aspect of emotional life as it relates to social integration and rejection.