The fact that brain disorder can impair social interactions different ways
suggests that social competence has multiple components that have foundatio
ns in brain systems. The physiological basis of one as social cognition, th
eory of mind, is just beginning to be understood. Brain-imaging studies sug
gest that a network of areas linking medial prefrontal and temporal cortex
forms the neural substrate of mentalizing, that is, representing one's own
and other people's mental states. The medial prefrontal areas are prominent
also in tasks that involve self-monitoring, whereas the temporal regions a
re prominent also in tasks that involve the representation of goals of acti
ons. We speculate that the precursors of mentalizing ability derive from a
brain system that evolved for representing agents and actions, and the rela
tionships between them.