Department of Psychology, and Center for Adaptive Systems of Brain-Body Interactions, George Mason University, MS3F5 4400 University Drive, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2024 Oct 21;379(1912):20220522. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2022.0522. Epub 2024 Sep 4.
Even in our highly interconnected modern world, geographic factors play an important role in human social connections. Similarly, social relationships influence how and where we travel, and how we think about our spatial world. Here, we review the growing body of neuroscience research that is revealing multiple interactions between social and spatial processes in both humans and non-human animals. We review research on the cognitive and neural representation of spatial and social information, and highlight recent findings suggesting that underlying mechanisms might be common to both. We discuss how spatial factors can influence social behaviour, and how social concepts modify representations of space. In so doing, this review elucidates not only how neural representations of social and spatial information interact but also similarities in how the brain represents and operates on analogous information about its social and spatial surroundings.This article is part of the theme issue 'The spatial-social interface: a theoretical and empirical integration'.
即使在我们这个高度互联的现代世界,地理因素在人类社会联系中也起着重要作用。同样,社会关系也影响着我们旅行的方式和地点,以及我们如何看待我们的空间世界。在这里,我们回顾了越来越多的神经科学研究,这些研究揭示了人类和非人类动物的社会和空间过程之间的多种相互作用。我们回顾了关于空间和社会信息的认知和神经表示的研究,并强调了最近的发现,表明潜在的机制可能对两者都通用。我们讨论了空间因素如何影响社会行为,以及社会概念如何修改对空间的表示。这样做不仅阐明了社会和空间信息的神经表示如何相互作用,还阐明了大脑如何表示和处理关于其社会和空间环境的类似信息。本文是主题为“空间-社会界面:理论和实证整合”的特刊的一部分。