Table of Contents
1. Social intelligence: What it is and why we need it more than ever before; Robert J. Sternberg, Avery Siying Li.- 2. Nonverbal receiving ability as emotional and cognitive empathy: Conceptualization and measurement; Ross Buck, Brett Graham, Ryan Allred, Roeland Hancock.- 3. Empathy and rapport as spontaneous communication: At the intersection of the traditional social and behavioral sciences, and the new affective and communication sciences; Ross Buck, Stephen Stifano, Brett Graham, Ryan Allred.- 4. Factors that facilitate or impair kinesic and vocalic nonverbal behaviors during interpersonal deception; Judee K. Burgoon, Lauren M. Hamel, J. Pete Blair, Nathan W. Twyman.- 5. Nonverbal communication: Evolution and today; Mark G. Frank and Anne Solbu.- 6. Nonverbal steps to the origin of language; David B. Givens.- 7. A new look at person memory; Terrence G. Horgan.- 8. Communicating with robots: What we do wrong and what we do right in Artificial Social Intelligence, and what we need to do better; Arvid Kappas, Rebecca Stower, Eric J. Vanman.- 9. Reading faces: Ability to recognize true and false emotion; Aleksandra Kostić, Derek Chadee, Jasmina Nedeljković.- 10. Hidden tears and scrambled joy: On the adaptive costs of unguarded nonverbal social signals; Dennis Küster.- 11. Interpersonal accuracy and interaction outcomes: Why and how reading others correctly has adaptive advantages in social interactions; Tristan Palese, Marianne Schmid Mast.- 12. Skill in social situations: The essence of savoir-faire; Ronald E. Riggio, Leslie G. Eaton, David C. Funder.- 13. Inter- and intrapersonal downsides of accurately perceiving others’ emotions; Katja Schlegel.- 14. Trait impressions from faces demonstrate preserved social intelligence in older adulthood; Leslie A. Zebrowitz, Robert G. Franklin.- 15. Postscript: Social intelligence asthe social construction of reality: An augmented Agenda for social-intelligence research; Robert J. Sternberg.