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Author(s):
Arezoo Taebi, Hannah Kiesow, Kai Vogeley, Leonhard Schilbach, Boris C Bernhardt, Danilo Bzdok
Publish date:
8 June 2020
Journal:
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience
PubMed ID:
32507896

Abstract

The social brain hypothesis proposes that the complexity of human brains has coevolved with increasing complexity of social interactions in primate societies. The present study explored the possible relationships between brain morphology and the richness of more intimate ‘inner’ and wider ‘outer’ social circles by integrating Bayesian hierarchical modeling with a large cohort sample from the UK Biobank resource (n = 10 000). In this way, we examined population volume effects in 36 regions of the ‘social brain’, ranging from lower sensory to higher associative cortices. We observed strong volume effects in the visual sensory network for the group of individuals with satisfying friendships. Further, the limbic network displayed several brain regions with substantial volume variations in individuals with a lack of social support. Our population neuroscience approach thus showed that distinct networks of the social brain show different patterns of volume variations linked to the examined social indices.

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Institution:
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, United States of America

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