Social Neuroscience Flashcards

1
Q

what does SN involve?

A

linking mind and behaviour (psychology) to the brain (biology and neuroscience)

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2
Q

what are key topics in SN similar to?

A

cognitive neuroscience, by considering decision-making and emotions over attitudes and relationships

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3
Q

criticism of SN

A

reductionism- social processes must be best understood at the social level

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4
Q

domain-general

A

brain areas involved in social cognition respond to everything

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5
Q

domain-specific

A

brain areas only respond to social cognition

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6
Q

module

A

computational routine that responds to particular inputs and is highly specialised

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7
Q

theories of SN

A

theory theory
simulation theory

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8
Q

theory theory

A

domain-specific

others’ minds are understood by forming a folk psychological theory, which consists of a set of concepts about others (beliefs and desires) and governing principles of how these concepts interact

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9
Q

simulation theory

A

domain-general

others’ minds are understood by simulation and finding mirror neurons (neurons that fire when an animal acts and when observing the same action from another)

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10
Q

common cognitive neuroscience pitfalls

A

reverse inference

voodoo correlations

the salmon

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11
Q

reverse inference

A

reasoning back from the presence of brain activation to engagement of a particular cognitive function

can be improved by examining brain networks or using more precise regions

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12
Q

voodoo correlations

A

if brain regions-of-interest (ROI) and definitions are based on the same data, this leads to circulatory and inflated chance of type one errors

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13
Q

the salmon

A

important to use appropriate statistics and correct for multiple comparisons

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14
Q

what does SN consider?

A

the extent to which cognitive and neural processes are specialised for social behaviour or shared with other non-social faculties

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15
Q

what is the social brain hypothesis?

A

cognitive abilities required for navigating social environments shaped the large brains of primates relative to other animals

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16
Q

computation (why)

A

prosocial behaviour

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17
Q

algorithm (what)

A

associative learning

18
Q

implementation

A

(how/physical)

19
Q

brain areas that overlap with general reward learning:

A
  • anterior cingulate sulcus (ACCs)
  • ventral medial prefrontal cortex (VMPFC)
  • amygdala
  • ventral striatum (Vstr)
20
Q

brain areas that are more socially specialised:

A
  • anterior cingulate gyrus (ACCg)
  • dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC)
  • temporo parietal junction (TPJ)
  • superior temporal sulcus (STS)
21
Q

empathy

A

the capacity to vicariously experience and understand others’ emotions

involves shared representations and mental flexibility to enable shifts in perspective

22
Q

what precedes empathy?

A

emotional contagion and mimicry

23
Q

what results from empathy?

A

sympathy and compassion

24
Q

brain regions involved in empathy

A

ACC and insula, connected to:

  • supplementary motor area (SMA) and granular insula (Ig)
  • ACCs and dysgranular insula (Id)
  • ACCg and argranular insula (Ia)
25
Q

pain

A

the perception of actual or threatened tissue damage and the private experience of unpleasantness

26
Q

singer (2004) found…

A

the ACC and Insula activated for self-pain and others’ pain, providing evidence of signal empathy

27
Q

ACCg

A

specialisation for others’ reward, suggesting this has a socially specialised function

28
Q

evidence for shared representations

A

placebo analgesia effect hypothesises that experimentally reducing the first-hand experience of pain should also reduce empathy for pain if empathy is ‘shared’

29
Q

evidence against shared representations

A

patients with congenital insensitivities to pain still activate ACC and anterior insula (AI)

activation for others’ pain and reward is seen in ACCg and AI, not in ACCs or posterior inula (PI) which are associated with self-pain

30
Q

domain-general or domain-specific?

A

empathy and vicarious processing seem to be both domain-general (ACCs)

and domain-specific (ACCg) with shared and non-shared neural correlates involved in this processing

31
Q

what is empathy in regard to prosocial behaviour?

A

the capacity to understand and resonate with the affect of other people

32
Q

benefit of using economic games to measure prosociality

A

reveal actual preferences through having choices become incentivised and improving subject anonymity

33
Q

computational fMRI

A

measures behaviour by choices
- uses a maths model to estimate values (how good each choice is) and correlate this with brain activity for each decision over time

34
Q

associative learning theory

A

prediction errors (PE) are the key process that drives learning

these signal the unexpectedness of our outcomes (the difference between prediction and actual outcome)

35
Q

how much we are learning is determined by:

A
  1. the PE (how unexpected the outcome is)
  2. the learning rate which scales the PE (determines how much the value on each trial is updated, which differs between individuals and contexts)
36
Q

what do prosocial learning tasks show?

A

higher learning rates for self, which is modulated by empathy

37
Q

what tracks prosocial PE?

A

subgenual anterior cingulate cortex

38
Q

what tracks PE regardless of beneficiary?

A

ventral striatum

39
Q

damage to sgACC…

A

disrupts learning to gain prosocial rewards

40
Q

older adults are…

A
  • worse at associative learning tasks
  • more willing to put in effort to help others
  • show reduced self-bias during prosocial learning