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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Social and non-social learning: Common, or specialised, mechanisms? (BACN Early Career Prize Lecture 2022)

Jennifer Cook

Dr.

University of Birmingham, UK

Schedule
Tuesday, September 12, 2023

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Schedule

Tuesday, September 12, 2023

4:00 PM Europe/London

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Host: British Association for Cognitive Neuroscience BACN

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

British Association for Cognitive Neuroscience BACN

Duration

45 minutes

Abstract

The last decade has seen a burgeoning interest in studying the neural and computational mechanisms that underpin social learning (learning from others). Many findings support the view that learning from other people is underpinned by the same, ‘domain-general’, mechanisms underpinning learning from non-social stimuli. Despite this, the idea that humans possess social-specific learning mechanisms - adaptive specializations moulded by natural selection to cope with the pressures of group living - persists. In this talk I explore the persistence of this idea. First, I present dissociations between social and non-social learning - patterns of data which are difficult to explain under the domain-general thesis and which therefore support the idea that we have evolved special mechanisms for social learning. Subsequently, I argue that most studies that have dissociated social and non-social learning have employed paradigms in which social information comprises a secondary, additional, source of information that can be used to supplement learning from non-social stimuli. Thus, in most extant paradigms, social and non-social learning differ both in terms of social nature (social or non-social) and status (primary or secondary). I conclude that status is an important driver of apparent differences between social and non-social learning. When we account for differences in status, we see that social and non-social learning share common (dopamine-mediated) mechanisms.

Topics

adaptive specializationscognitioncomputational mechanismsdomain-general mechanismsdopaminegroup livinglearninglearning paradigmsnon-social learningsocial learningsocial neuroscience

About the Speaker

Jennifer Cook

Dr.

University of Birmingham, UK

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

jencooklab.com

@Jennifer_L_Cook

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/Jennifer_L_Cook

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