Differences in popularity are a key aspect of status in virtually all human groups and shape social interactions within them. Little is known, however, about how we track and neurally represent others’ popularity. We addressed this question in two real-world social networks using sociometric methods to quantify popularity. Each group member (perceiver) viewed faces of every other group member (target) while whole-brain functional MRI data were collected. Independent functional localizer tasks were used to identify brain systems supporting affective valuation (ventromedial prefrontal cortex, ventral striatum, amygdala) and social cognition (dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, precuneus, temporoparietal junction), respectively. During the face-vie...
The capacity to accurately infer the thoughts and intentions of other people is critical for effecti...
SummarySocial hierarchies guide behavior in many species, including humans, where status also has an...
SummaryEvaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior...
The current study examines how popularity affects behaviour through inferences and neural correlates...
The current research explored the neural mechanisms linking social status to perceptions of the soci...
Little is known about the individual differences in sociobehavioral tendencies that uniquely charact...
Our reputation is important to us; we've experienced natural selection to care about our reputation....
fMRI The current research explored the neural mechanisms linking social status to perceptions of the...
Our reputation is important to us; we’ve experienced natural selection to care about our reputation....
Human behavior is embedded in social networks. Certain characteristics of the positions that people ...
Humans rapidly extract diverse and complex information from ongoing social interactions, but the per...
Human social networks are overwhelmingly homophilous: individuals tend to befriend others who are si...
Humans are a highly social species. Complex interactions for mutual support range from helping neigh...
Naturalistic stimuli evoke highly reliable brain activity across viewers. Here we record neural acti...
The ‘Social Brain Hypothesis’ suggests that selection for the expansion of the neocortex in primate ...
The capacity to accurately infer the thoughts and intentions of other people is critical for effecti...
SummarySocial hierarchies guide behavior in many species, including humans, where status also has an...
SummaryEvaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior...
The current study examines how popularity affects behaviour through inferences and neural correlates...
The current research explored the neural mechanisms linking social status to perceptions of the soci...
Little is known about the individual differences in sociobehavioral tendencies that uniquely charact...
Our reputation is important to us; we've experienced natural selection to care about our reputation....
fMRI The current research explored the neural mechanisms linking social status to perceptions of the...
Our reputation is important to us; we’ve experienced natural selection to care about our reputation....
Human behavior is embedded in social networks. Certain characteristics of the positions that people ...
Humans rapidly extract diverse and complex information from ongoing social interactions, but the per...
Human social networks are overwhelmingly homophilous: individuals tend to befriend others who are si...
Humans are a highly social species. Complex interactions for mutual support range from helping neigh...
Naturalistic stimuli evoke highly reliable brain activity across viewers. Here we record neural acti...
The ‘Social Brain Hypothesis’ suggests that selection for the expansion of the neocortex in primate ...
The capacity to accurately infer the thoughts and intentions of other people is critical for effecti...
SummarySocial hierarchies guide behavior in many species, including humans, where status also has an...
SummaryEvaluating the abilities of others is fundamental for successful economic and social behavior...