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Computational approaches to the neuroscience of social perception

Jeffrey A. Brooks, Ryan M. Stolier, Jonathan B. Freeman

2020Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Across multiple domains of social perception-including social categorization, emotion perception, impression formation and mentalizing-multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data has permitted a more detailed understanding of how social information is processed and represented in the brain. As in other neuroimaging fields, the neuroscientific study of social perception initially relied on broad structure-function associations derived from univariate fMRI analysis to map neural regions involved in these processes. In this review, we trace the ways that social neuroscience studies using MVPA have built on these neuroanatomical associations to better characterize the computational relevance of different brain regions, and discuss how MVPA allows explicit tests of the correspondence between psychological models and the neural representation of social information. We also describe current and future advances in methodological approaches to multivariate fMRI data and their theoretical value for the neuroscience of social perception.

Topics & Concepts

Social neurosciencePsychologyCategorizationPerceptionNeuroimagingFunctional magnetic resonance imagingMentalizationCognitive psychologySocial perceptionFunctional neuroimagingEmotion perceptionUnivariateSocial cognitionCognitive scienceNeuroscienceMultivariate statisticsArtificial intelligenceCognitionComputer scienceMachine learningFace Recognition and PerceptionPsychology of Moral and Emotional JudgmentEvolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior
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