4.8 Review

Social Attention and the Brain

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 20, Pages R958-R962

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.08.010

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Autism Speaks Foundation and a Princeton University [NRSA T32 MH065214-1]
  2. Predoctoral Individual NRSA Fellowship from NIMH
  3. Autism Speaks Foundation [EY01 3496, MH71817]
  4. Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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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 and translate that information into value signals that bias orienting. This process likely proceeds via two distinct but integrated pathways: an ancestral, subcortical route that mediates crude but fast orienting to animate objects and faces; and a more derived route involving cortical orienting circuits that mediate nuanced and context-dependent social attention.

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