Shared neural coding for social hierarchy and reward value in primate amygdala

被引:0
作者
Jérôme Munuera
Mattia Rigotti
C. Daniel Salzman
机构
[1] Columbia University,Department of Neuroscience
[2] IBM T.J. Watson Research Center,Kavli Institute for Brain Sciences
[3] Columbia University,Department of Psychiatry
[4] Columbia University,Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute
[5] New York State Psychiatric Institute,undefined
[6] Columbia University,undefined
来源
Nature Neuroscience | 2018年 / 21卷
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摘要
The social brain hypothesis posits that dedicated neural systems process social information. In support of this, neurophysiological data have shown that some brain regions are specialized for representing faces. It remains unknown, however, whether distinct anatomical substrates also represent more complex social variables, such as the hierarchical rank of individuals within a social group. Here we show that the primate amygdala encodes the hierarchical rank of individuals in the same neuronal ensembles that encode the rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli. By contrast, orbitofrontal and anterior cingulate cortices lack strong representations of hierarchical rank while still representing reward values. These results challenge the conventional view that dedicated neural systems process social information. Instead, information about hierarchical rank—which contributes to the assessment of the social value of individuals within a group—is linked in the amygdala to representations of rewards associated with nonsocial stimuli.
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页码:415 / 423
页数:8
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