TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
5Total items
3Seminars
2ePosters

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Unmotivated bias

William Cunningham
University of Toronto
Nov 12, 2024

In this talk, I will explore how social affective biases arise even in the absence of motivational factors as an emergent outcome of the basic structure of social learning. In several studies, we found that initial negative interactions with some members of a group can cause subsequent avoidance of the entire group, and that this avoidance perpetuates stereotypes. Additional cognitive modeling discovered that approach and avoidance behavior based on biased beliefs not only influences the evaluative (positive or negative) impressions of group members, but also shapes the depth of the cognitive representations available to learn about individuals. In other words, people have richer cognitive representations of members of groups that are not avoided, akin to individualized vs group level categories. I will end presenting a series of multi-agent reinforcement learning simulations that demonstrate the emergence of these social-structural feedback loops in the development and maintenance of affective biases.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Data-driven Artificial Social Intelligence: From Social Appropriateness to Fairness

Hatice Gunes
Department of Computer Science and Technology, University of Cambridge
Mar 16, 2021

Designing artificially intelligent systems and interfaces with socio-emotional skills is a challenging task. Progress in industry and developments in academia provide us a positive outlook, however, the artificial social and emotional intelligence of the current technology is still limited. My lab’s research has been pushing the state of the art in a wide spectrum of research topics in this area, including the design and creation of new datasets; novel feature representations and learning algorithms for sensing and understanding human nonverbal behaviours in solo, dyadic and group settings; designing longitudinal human-robot interaction studies for wellbeing; and investigating how to mitigate the bias that creeps into these systems. In this talk, I will present some of my research team’s explorations in these areas including social appropriateness of robot actions, virtual reality based cognitive training with affective adaptation, and bias and fairness in data-driven emotionally intelligent systems.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Modelling affective biases in rodents: behavioural and computational approaches

Claire Hales
Robinson lab, University of Bristol
Feb 10, 2021

My research focuses, broadly speaking, on how emotions impact decision making. Specifically, I am interested in affective biases, a phenomenon known to be important in depression. Using a rodent decision-making task, combined with computational modelling I have investigated how different antidepressant and pro-depressant manipulations that are known to alter mood in humans alter judgement bias, and provided insight into the decision processes that underlie these behaviours. I will also highlight how the combination of behaviour and modelling can provide a truly translation approach, enabling comparison and interpretation of the same cognitive processes between animal and human research.

ePosterNeuroscience

Effect of amitriptyline on affective biases in male rats

Katherine Kamenish
ePosterNeuroscience

Differences between first- and second-generation antidepressants and modulation of affective biases in Lister Hooded rats

Katie Kamenish, Emma Robinson

FENS Forum 2024

affective bias coverage

5 items

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ePoster2

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