Abstract

Event Abstract Back to Event Neuroethology of social attention Michael Platt1* 1 Duke University Medical Center, Germany Humans and other animals pay attention to other members of their groups to acquire valuable social information about them, including information about their identity, dominance, fertility, emotions, and likely intent. In primates, attention to other group members and the objects of their attention is mediated by neural circuits that transduce sensory information about others, translate that information into value signals, and motivationally scale motor control signals to bias orienting behavior. This process unfolds via a subcortical route mediating fast, reflexive orienting to animate objects and faces and a more derived route involving cortical orienting circuits mediating nuanced and context-dependent social attention. Ongoing studies probe individual and species differences in the neural mechanisms that mediate social attention, the genetic origins of these differences, and their implications for differences in social behavior and social structure using naturalistic, ecologically valid social contexts. Conference: Computational and Systems Neuroscience 2010, Salt Lake City, UT, United States, 25 Feb - 2 Mar, 2010. Presentation Type: Oral Presentation Topic: Oral presentations Citation: Platt M (2010). Neuroethology of social attention. Front. Neurosci. Conference Abstract: Computational and Systems Neuroscience 2010. doi: 10.3389/conf.fnins.2010.03.00022 Copyright: The abstracts in this collection have not been subject to any Frontiers peer review or checks, and are not endorsed by Frontiers. They are made available through the Frontiers publishing platform as a service to conference organizers and presenters. The copyright in the individual abstracts is owned by the author of each abstract or his/her employer unless otherwise stated. Each abstract, as well as the collection of abstracts, are published under a Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 (attribution) licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) and may thus be reproduced, translated, adapted and be the subject of derivative works provided the authors and Frontiers are attributed. For Frontiers’ terms and conditions please see https://www.frontiersin.org/legal/terms-and-conditions. Received: 17 Feb 2010; Published Online: 17 Feb 2010. * Correspondence: Michael Platt, Duke University Medical Center, Tuebingen, Germany, mplatt@pennmedicine.upenn.edu Login Required This action requires you to be registered with Frontiers and logged in. To register or login click here. Abstract Info Abstract The Authors in Frontiers Michael Platt Google Michael Platt Google Scholar Michael Platt PubMed Michael Platt Related Article in Frontiers Google Scholar PubMed Abstract Close Back to top Javascript is disabled. Please enable Javascript in your browser settings in order to see all the content on this page.

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