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- Q17001588 subject Q10053541.
- Q17001588 subject Q6553105.
- Q17001588 subject Q7028952.
- Q17001588 subject Q7066126.
- Q17001588 subject Q7066654.
- Q17001588 subject Q7144653.
- Q17001588 subject Q8386413.
- Q17001588 abstract "Deep social mind is a concept in evolutionary psychology; it refers to the distinctively human capacity to 'read' (that is, to infer) the mental states of others while reciprocally enabling those others to read one's own mental states at the same time. The term 'deep social mind' was first coined in 1999 by Andrew Whiten, professor of Evolutionary and Developmental Psychology at St. Andrews University, Scotland. Together with closely related terms such as 'reflexivity' and 'intersubjectivity', it is now well-established among scholars investigating the evolutionary emergence of human sociality, cognition and communication.".
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q10053541.
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- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q1314553.
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- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q583467.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q639219.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q6553105.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7028952.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7066126.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7066654.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7102483.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7102639.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q714346.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7144653.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7364.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q7569.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q80174.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q8386413.
- Q17001588 wikiPageWikiLink Q861691.
- Q17001588 comment "Deep social mind is a concept in evolutionary psychology; it refers to the distinctively human capacity to 'read' (that is, to infer) the mental states of others while reciprocally enabling those others to read one's own mental states at the same time. The term 'deep social mind' was first coined in 1999 by Andrew Whiten, professor of Evolutionary and Developmental Psychology at St. Andrews University, Scotland.".
- Q17001588 label "Deep social mind".