
Emotion, Empathy & the Social Brain
An evidence-based hub on emotion, empathy, theory of mind, social cognition, attachment, and the circuits that make humans intensely social animals.
Key takeaways
- Emotion and cognition are deeply intertwined, not opposed systems.
- Empathy is multidimensional — emotional contagion, perspective-taking, and compassion are dissociable.
- Theory of mind develops in early childhood and continues to refine across the lifespan.
- Social isolation has measurable effects on cognition and long-term brain health.
- Moral judgment recruits both fast intuitive and slower deliberative circuits.
What this hub covers
Human cognition is fundamentally social. Most brain regions once labeled 'emotional' are now understood as integrated computational systems that shape attention, memory, and decision-making. This hub maps the science of emotion and social cognition as they actually work.
Long-form articles
Sourced, evidence-based explainers. New entries added regularly.

Emotion · Neuroscience · 9 min
The Neuroscience of Emotion: Beyond the 'Reptilian Brain'
Modern affective neuroscience replaces the triune-brain caricature with distributed networks that integrate body, context, and prediction.
Read article

Empathy · Social Cognition · 9 min
Empathy and Mirror Neurons: What the Evidence Actually Shows
Mirror neurons exist, but the popular 'mirror neuron theory of everything' overstates the case. Empathy involves multiple dissociable systems.
Read article

Social Cognition · Development · 8 min
Theory of Mind: Reading Other Minds
The ability to model others' beliefs, desires, and intentions is a foundational human cognitive skill — and one of the most actively studied in developmental and social neuroscience.
Read article

Networks · Social Neuroscience · 8 min
The Social Brain Network
A consistent set of brain regions — the social brain — supports thinking about people, relationships, and groups. Its architecture mirrors how socially demanding human life is.
Read article

Regulation · Mental Health · 8 min
Emotional Regulation: How the Brain Modulates Feeling
Effective emotional regulation is one of the strongest predictors of well-being, mental health, and life outcomes — and its neural mechanisms are now well characterized.
Read article

Attachment · Neurobiology · 8 min
Love and Attachment in the Brain
Attachment, pair bonding, and parental love are supported by ancient neuromodulator systems — oxytocin, vasopressin, and dopaminergic reward — interacting with cortical control.
Read article

Loneliness · Health · 8 min
Loneliness and the Brain
Chronic loneliness alters stress physiology, accelerates cognitive decline, and increases dementia risk. The brain treats social pain like physical pain.
Read article

Morality · Cognition · 9 min
Moral Cognition: How the Brain Decides Right and Wrong
Moral judgment recruits fast intuitive processes and slower deliberative ones — and the balance between them shapes the kind of moral reasoner each of us is.
Read article
Frequently asked questions
Are emotions universal?
+
Basic affective dimensions (valence, arousal) appear universal; specific emotion categories show meaningful cultural variation.
Are mirror neurons the basis of empathy?
+
They contribute to a part of it — motor resonance — but full empathy involves multiple networks, not a single 'empathy neuron'.
Is loneliness bad for the brain?
+
Yes — chronic loneliness correlates with elevated stress, faster cognitive decline, and higher dementia risk in older adults.
