Abstract

Complex social interplay is a defining property of the human species. In social neuroscience, many experiments have sought to first define and then locate ‘perspective taking’, ‘empathy’, and other psychological concepts to specific brain circuits. Seldom, bottom-up studies were conducted to first identify explanatory patterns of brain variation, which are then related to psychological concepts; perhaps due to a lack of large population datasets. In this spirit, we performed a systematic de-construction of social brain morphology into its elementary building blocks, involving ~10,000 UK Biobank participants. We explored coherent representations of structural co-variation at population scale within a recent social brain atlas, by translating autoencoder neural networks from deep learning. The learned subnetworks revealed essential patterns of structural relationships between social brain regions, with the nucleus accumbens, medial prefrontal cortex, and temporoparietal junction embedded at the core. Some of the uncovered subnetworks contributed to predicting examined social traits in general, while other subnetworks helped predict specific facets of social functioning, such as the experience of social isolation. As a consequence of our population-level evidence, spatially overlapping subsystems of the social brain probably relate to interindividual differences in everyday social life.

Highlights

  • All revealed hidden social subnetworks showed specific predictive roles comparing between the examined social markers

  • The top three of the delineated network representations hidden in the social brain atlas distilled information from sources of population variation and effectively recapitulated the total social brain structure across individuals from the UK Biobank cohort

  • Specific social brain regions embedded within each subnetwork emerged as especially informative about cohesive dependencies that describe structural relationships across the entire social brain

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to show that a single social brain region may have multiple assignments in a defined set of subnetworks

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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