SummaryAnimals as diverse as arthropods [1], fish [2], reptiles [3], birds [4], and mammals, including primates [5], depend on visually acquired information about conspecifics for survival and reproduction. For example, mate localization often relies on vision [6], and visual cues frequently advertise sexual receptivity or phenotypic quality [5]. Moreover, recognizing previously encountered competitors or individuals with preestablished territories [7] or dominance status [1, 5] can eliminate the need for confrontation and the associated energetic expense and risk for injury. Furthermore, primates, including humans, tend to look toward conspecifics and objects of their attention [8, 9], and male monkeys will forego juice rewards to view ima...
Social brain function, which allows us to adapt our behavior to social context, is poorly understood...
International audienceDecisions about the behavioral significance of sensory stimuli often require c...
A key feature of most social relationships is that we like seeing good things happen to others. Rese...
<p>The ultimate goal of the nervous systems of all animals is conceptually simple: Manipulate the ex...
<p>To solicit the attention or determine the intentions of another, we use our eyes. While many anim...
SummarySocial decisions depend on reliable information about others. Consequently, social primates a...
Humans and other animals pay attention to other members of their groups to acquire valuable social i...
The motivation and capacity to be social is necessary for human survival. Successful learning of com...
Social decisions depend on reliable information about others. Consequently, social primates are moti...
SummaryIndividuals value information that improves decision making. When social interactions complic...
Recordings in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) reveal that parietal cortex encodes variables rel...
Activity in a network of areas spanning the superior temporal sulcus, dorsomedial frontal cortex, an...
Although it is established that F5 neurons can distinguish between nonsocial goals such as bringing ...
textLateral intraparietal area (LIP) neurons are thought to compute the decision of where to look. S...
given visual-field location fire at a rate proportional to that location’s current draw on attention...
Social brain function, which allows us to adapt our behavior to social context, is poorly understood...
International audienceDecisions about the behavioral significance of sensory stimuli often require c...
A key feature of most social relationships is that we like seeing good things happen to others. Rese...
<p>The ultimate goal of the nervous systems of all animals is conceptually simple: Manipulate the ex...
<p>To solicit the attention or determine the intentions of another, we use our eyes. While many anim...
SummarySocial decisions depend on reliable information about others. Consequently, social primates a...
Humans and other animals pay attention to other members of their groups to acquire valuable social i...
The motivation and capacity to be social is necessary for human survival. Successful learning of com...
Social decisions depend on reliable information about others. Consequently, social primates are moti...
SummaryIndividuals value information that improves decision making. When social interactions complic...
Recordings in the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) reveal that parietal cortex encodes variables rel...
Activity in a network of areas spanning the superior temporal sulcus, dorsomedial frontal cortex, an...
Although it is established that F5 neurons can distinguish between nonsocial goals such as bringing ...
textLateral intraparietal area (LIP) neurons are thought to compute the decision of where to look. S...
given visual-field location fire at a rate proportional to that location’s current draw on attention...
Social brain function, which allows us to adapt our behavior to social context, is poorly understood...
International audienceDecisions about the behavioral significance of sensory stimuli often require c...
A key feature of most social relationships is that we like seeing good things happen to others. Rese...