creators_name: Morin, Alain type: journalp datestamp: 2003-09-19 lastmod: 2011-03-11 08:55:20 metadata_visibility: show title: Let's face it. A review of Keenan, Gallup, & Falk's book "The Face in the Mirror" ispublished: pub subjects: brain-img subjects: bio-primat subjects: bio-evo subjects: evol-psy subjects: behav-neuro-sci subjects: bio-ani-behav subjects: bio-ani-cog subjects: comp-psy subjects: cog-psy subjects: neuro-anat full_text_status: public keywords: Self-awareness, theory-of-mind, self-recognition, lateralization, language. abstract: Using neuroimaging experiments and neuropsychological case studies, Keenan mainly examines the neural basis of mirror self-recognition (MSR) and Theory of Mind (TOM), and proposes that self-awareness is dominantly associated with areas of the right hemisphere. I believe that this conclusion is both inflated and premature. MSR is only superficially related to genuine, fully mature human self-awareness. Furthermore, TOM should not be equated with self-awareness because some forms of it (e.g., self-rumination) actually interfere with thinking about others' mental states. One more general (and serious) problem with the book is the proposal that because MSR and TOM are mainly generated by right hemispheric activity, then it follows that self-awareness itself is associated with activity of the same hemisphere. Recent studies on autobiographical memory and self-description also indicate left hemispheric activity date: 2003-09 date_type: published publication: Evolutionary Psychology volume: 1 pagerange: 161-171 refereed: TRUE referencetext: Briscoe, G. (2002, June). Language, inner speech, and consciousness. Paper presented at the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness, Barcelona, Spain. Burns, T., & Engdahl, E. (1998b). The social construction of consciousness Part 2: Individual selves, self-awareness, and reflectivity. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 5 (2), 166-184. 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