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Mirror neurons and imitation learning as the driving force behind "the great leap forward" in human evolution
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2010
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NeuropsychologyBrain DevelopmentDevelopmental Cognitive NeuroscienceBrain MechanismCognitionBrain ScienceDevelopmental NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesSocial NeuroscienceNeural MechanismImitative LearningBiological PsychologySocial Learning TheoryCognitive NeuroscienceHuman LearningImitation LearningCognitive ScienceBehavioral NeuroscienceMirror NeuronsNeurophilosophyEmbodied CognitionGreat Leap ForwardExperimental PsychologyMental AbilitiesHuman EvolutionFrontal LobesNeural ScienceIntegrative NeuroscienceNeuroanatomyHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscience
The discovery of mirror neurons in the frontal lobes of monkeys, and their potential relevance to human brain evolution — which I speculate on in this essay — is the single most important unreported (or at least, unpublicized) story of the decade. I predict that mirror neurons will do for psychology what DNA did for biology: they will provide a unifying framework and help explain a host of mental abilities that have hitherto remained mysterious and inaccessible to experiments.