Adaptive Prediction for Social Contexts: The Cerebellar Contribution to Typical and Atypical Social Behaviors

Social interactions involve processes ranging from face recognition to understanding others' intentions. To guide appropriate behavior in a given context, social interactions rely on accurately predicting the outcomes of one's actions and the thoughts of others. Because social interactions...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annual review of neuroscience 2021-07, Vol.44 (1), p.475-493
Hauptverfasser: Stoodley, Catherine J, Tsai, Peter T
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container_title Annual review of neuroscience
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creator Stoodley, Catherine J
Tsai, Peter T
description Social interactions involve processes ranging from face recognition to understanding others' intentions. To guide appropriate behavior in a given context, social interactions rely on accurately predicting the outcomes of one's actions and the thoughts of others. Because social interactions are inherently dynamic, these predictions must be continuously adapted. The neural correlates of social processing have largely focused on emotion, mentalizing, and reward networks, without integration of systems involved in prediction. The cerebellum forms predictive models to calibrate movements and adapt them to changing situations, and cerebellar predictive modeling is thought to extend to nonmotor behaviors. Primary cerebellar dysfunction can produce social deficits, and atypical cerebellar structure and function are reported in autism, which is characterized by social communication challenges and atypical predictive processing. We examine the evidence that cerebellar-mediated predictions and adaptation play important roles in social processes and argue that disruptions in these processes contribute to autism.
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subjects adaptation
Autism
Cerebellar Diseases
Cerebellum
Emotions
Humans
implicit
Information processing
Pattern recognition
prediction
Prediction models
Reinforcement
social
Social Behavior
Social Environment
Social interaction
Social interactions
Structure-function relationships
title Adaptive Prediction for Social Contexts: The Cerebellar Contribution to Typical and Atypical Social Behaviors
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