Interdisciplinary field of research
In addition to having been termed an "interdisciplinary area for research, an area which demonstrates the concomitant relationship between physiology and social behavior" (Di Mascio et al. 1955: 4), sociophysiology may also be described as "social ethology" and "social energetics" ( Waxweiler 1906: 62). That is, the "physiology of reactive phenomena caused by the mutual excitations of individuals of the same species" (Waxweiler 1906: 62). The interdisciplinary nature of sociophysiology largely entails a "synthesis ofInterpersonal physiology
Furthermore, sociophysiology explores the "intimate relationship and mutual regulation between social and physiological systems that is especially vital in human groups" (Barchas 1986: 210). In other words, sociophysiology studies the "physio- and psycho-energetic phenomena at the basis of social groupings" (Solvay 1906: 25). Along these lines, Zeliony (1912) noted that In addition, sociophysiology "describes structure-function relationships for body structures and interactive functions relevant to psychiatric illness" (Gardner 1997: 351), and also "assumes that psychiatric disorders are pathological variants of the motivation, emotions, and conflict involved in normal communicational processes" (Gardner and Price 1999: 247–248). Psychiatry, thus, involves the diagnosis and treatment of what Lilienfeld (1879: 280) termed "physiological social pathology", and may be classed as a subfield of sociophysiology, called "pathological sociophysiology" by Zeliony (1912: 405)."Die physiologische Socialpathologie" (Lilienfeld 1879: 280); "Pathologische Soziophysiologie" (Zeliony 1912: 405). As summarized by Ellwood (1916), Zeliony thought that, in the future, Ellwood (1916: 298) also noted that Zeliony's future sociophysiology, being a natural biological science, must be Darwinian. In short, sociophysiology is "reciprocal, interpersonal physiology" (Adler 2002: 885). Such interpersonal physiology may have implications in the realm of human politics. For example, the findings of a recent study "suggest that political attitudes vary with physiological traits linked to divergent manners of experiencing and processing environmental threats" (Oxley et al. 2008: 1669).Notes and references
Notes
References
*Adler, H. M. (2002). The sociophysiology of caring in the doctor–patient relationship. ''Journal of General Internal Medicine'', vol. 17, no. 11, pp. 883–890. *Barchas, P. R. (1986). A sociophysiological orientation to small groups. In E. J. Lawler, ed., ''Advances in Group Processes'', vol. 3, pp. 209–246. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press. *Di Mascio, A., Boyd, R. W., Greenblatt, M., and H. C. Solomon. (1955). The psychiatric interview (a sociophysiologic study). ''Diseases of the Nervous System'', vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 4–9. * Ellwood, C. A. (1916). Objectivism in sociology. ''American Journal of Sociology'', vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 289–305. *Freund, P. E. S. (1988). Bringing society into the body: Understanding socialized human nature. ''Theory and Society'', vol. 17, no. 6, pp. 839–864. *Gardner Jr., R. J. (1997). Sociophysiology as the basic science of psychiatry. ''Theoretical Medicine'', vol. 18, no. 4, pp. 335–356. *Gardner Jr., R. J., and J. S. Price. (1999). Sociophysiology and depression. In T. E. Joiner and J. C. Coyne, eds., ''The Interactional Nature of Depression: Advances in Interpersonal Approaches''. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. * Lilienfeld, P. (1879). ''Die sociale Physiologie''. Volume 4 of ''Gedanken über die Socialwissenschaft der Zukunft''. Mitau: E. Behre's Verlag. * Mauss, M. (1936). Les techniques du corps. ''Journal de Psychologie'', vol. 32, nos. 3–4, 15 mars – 15 avril 1936. Reprinted in M. Mauss, ''Sociologie et anthropologie'', Paris: PUF, 1950, pp. xxx-xxx. *Oxley, D. R. et al. (2008). Political attitudes vary with physiological traits. ''Science'' 19 September 2008: Vol. 321. no. 5896, pp. 1667–1670Further reading
*Barchas, P. R., ed. (1984). ''Social Hierarchies: Essays Toward a Sociophysiological Perspective''. Westport, CT: Greenwood. *Barchas, P. R. and S. P. Mendoza, eds. (1984). ''Social Cohesion: Essays Toward a Sociophysiological Perspective''. Westport, CT: Greenwood. *Buytendijk, F. J. (1974). ''Prolegomena to an Anthropological Physiology''. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. *Gardner Jr., R. J. and D. R. Wilson. (2004). Sociophysiology and evolutionary aspects of psychiatry. In J. Panksepp, ed., ''Textbook of Biological Psychiatry''. WileySee also
* Biological psychology * Ethology * Physiological psychology *External links
*Biozentrum Universität Würzburg: Research: Behavioral Physiology and Sociobiology