Page | 60 understanding the behavior of others. If the social brain includes monitoring and your brain mirrors the neural activity in motor systems that function in parallel. the brain of someone you see acting, this The mirror system puts the player in the could provide a basis for understanding opponent’s shoes and monitors the the motivation for the action. If your opponent’s actions in an anticipatory brain resonates to the observed action as manner. Other parts of the social brain if you were acting, this could call to maintain the distinction between player mind previous experiences acting that and opponent by shaping the way providing a memory for why you implementation of one’s actions, namely acted that way. That is, our social brain by engaging a counteraction. may directly resonate to the actions of , : : ?- In sum, a tennis game or any others without reasoning explicitly about wa . . tae . social interaction depends on a complex those actions. This kind of mechanism, . . . ar ; . network of brain regions that mediate through which intentions might be . . . perception and action, and the inferred, could then prepare responses . . . . - relationship between observed action quickly to facilitate the smooth flow of > . . or: : ; and one’s own behavior. The overlap in social interactions whether in a game or brai . . . : rain regions responsible for these two a dialogue. Of course, a critical aspect : . . ar . . important social functions suggests how of such a mechanism is to differentiate ' : . ; . tightly coupled and coordinated social our resonance to other people’s actions : , 7 interactions can be. However, these two and the control of our own. This kind — ; 3 . systems cannot operate in isolation from of neural system for mapping the actions . . ; . our knowledge of the context in which and intentions of others has been . . . . . behavior occurs. We, therefore, turn to identified with a network of regions : : . 5 this topic next. called the mirror neu