AI Article Synopsis

  • Successful integration into a social group relies on understanding the status and interaction rules among its members, which can be indicated through observed behaviors rather than physical traits.
  • A study using videos of macaque interactions found that viewers could accurately determine social status based on aggressive and appeasing gestures, with dominant individuals drawing more attention.
  • Neural activity in the amygdala of viewers reflected the social status of both individuals involved in the interactions, indicating that the brain processes status information for those being watched, whether they are attended to or not.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Successful integration into a hierarchical social group requires knowledge of the status of each individual and of the rules that govern social interactions within the group. In species that lack morphological indicators of status, social status can be inferred by observing the signals exchanged between individuals. We simulated social interactions between macaques by juxtaposing videos of aggressive and appeasing displays where two individuals appeared in each other's line of sight and their displays were timed to suggest the reciprocation of dominant and subordinate signals. Viewers of these videos successfully inferred the social status of the interacting characters. Dominant individuals attracted more social attention from viewers even when they were not engaged in social displays. Neurons in the viewers' amygdala signaled the status of both the attended (fixated) and the unattended individuals suggesting that in third party observers of social interactions, the amygdala signals jointly the status of interacting parties.

Highlights: Monkeys infer the social status of conspecifics from videos of simulated dyadic interactionsDuring fixations neural populations signal the social status of the attended individualsNeurons in the amygdala jointly encode the status of interacting individuals.

In Brief: Third party-viewers of pairwise dominant-subordinate interactions infer social status from the observed behaviors. Neurons in the amygdala are tuned to the inferred dominant/subordinate status of both individuals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11275939PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.15.603487DOI Listing

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