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Methodological approaches in social neuroscience have been rapidly evolving in recent years. Fueling these changes is the adoption of a variety of multivariate approaches that allow researchers to ask a wider and richer set of questions than was previously possible with standard univariate methods. In this chapter, we introduce several of the most popular multivariate methods and discuss how they can be used to advance our understanding of how social cognition and personality processes are represented in the brain. These methods have the potential to allow neuroscience measures to inform and advance theories in social and personality psychology more directly and are likely to become the dominant approaches in social neuroscience in the near future.
This conversation article brings together six of the original contributors to the 1993 Getting the Big Picture special issue of the British Journal for the History of Science. The contributors introduce their personal memories of the 1991 conference panel which formed the basis of that special issue. They also discuss the wider intellectual, institutional and political contexts of writing the history of science during the 1980s and 1990s, before concluding with reflections on the future of the discipline. The conversation was held live online via Microsoft Teams in March 2023. A professional transcript was produced by Sarah King. The transcript was then edited by James Poskett for length and clarity, before final edits were made by the contributors.
It is widely known that those in the helping professions are mandated to report suspected incidences of child maltreatment. However, few are aware of the historical resistance to mandated reporting that helping professionals demonstrated before the passing of the Child Abuse Prevention and Treatment Act (CAPTA) of 1974 and the associated federal mandates that compelled helping professionals to engage in mandated reporting, oftentimes against their will. By analysing historical policy documents through a grounded theory approach, the authors identified three themes that describe the rationale for the passage of CAPTA: (1) identifying national evidence of child abuse; (2) resistance to intrusion of the helping professional-client relationship; and (3) the necessity of immunity waivers for those who reported instances of child abuse and misdemeanor punishment for those who failed to report such instances. In light of conversations around abolishing or reforming child protective services, it is important to understand how the first federal child protective services policy in the United States originated and how these regulations embedded social control into the foundation of the helping professional-client relationship, thus turning helping professionals into unwilling agents of the state. Implications of mandated reporting, including introducing a penal aspect to the helping professional-client relationship, are also explored.
Pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) is the leading cause of disability in children under the age of 15, often resulting in executive function deficits and poor behavioral outcomes. Damage to white matter tracts may be a driving force behind these difficulties. We examined if whether 1) greater TBI severity was associated with worse neurobehavioral outcome, 2) greater TBI severity was associated with tract-based white matter microstructure, and 3) worse neurobehavioral outcome was associated with white matter microstructure.
Participants and Methods:
Twelve children with complicated-mild TBI (cmTBI; Mage=12.59, nmale=9), 17 with moderate-to-severe TBI (msTBI; Mage =11.50, nmale=11), and 21 with orthopedic injury (OI; Mage =11.60, nmale=16), 3.94 years post injury on average, were recruited from a large midwestern children’s hospital with a Level 1 Trauma Center. Parents completed the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) and Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) while children completed 64-direction diffusion tensor imaging in a Siemens 3T scanner. White matter microstructure was quantified with FMRIB’s Diffusion Toolbox (FSLv6.0.4). Tract-Based Spatial Statistics computed fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) for the cingulum bundle (CB), inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus (IFOF), superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF), and uncinate fasciculus (UF), bilaterally.
Results:
Group differences were assessed using one-way ANOVA. Children with msTBI were rated as having worse Sluggish Cognitive Tempo on the CBCL than children with cmTBI and OI (p=.02, eta2=.143); no other parent-rated differences reached significance. Group differences were found in left SLF FA (p=.031; msTBI<cmTBI=OI) and approached significance in left UF FA (p=.062, eta2=.114; msTBI<OI). Group differences were also found in right IFOF MD (p=.048; msTBI>OI) and left SLF MD (p=.013; msTBI>cmTBI=OI). Bivariate correlations assessed cross-domain associations. Higher left IFOF FA was associated with better BRIEF Metacognitive Skills (r=-.301, p=.030) and CBCL School Competence (r=.280; p=.049). Higher left SLF FA was associated with better BRIEF Behavioral Regulation and Metacognitive Skills (r=-.331, p=.017 and r=-.291, p=.036, respectively), and CBCL School Competence and Attention Problems (r=.398, p=.004 and r=-.435, p=.001, respectively). Similarly, higher right UF FA was broadly associated with better neurobehavioral outcomes, including Behavioral Regulation and Metacognitive Skills (r=-.324, p=.019 and r=-.359, p=.009, respectively), and School Competence, Attention Problems, and Sluggish Cognitive Tempo (r=.328, p=.020, r=-.398, p=.003, and r=-.356, p=.010, respectively). Higher right CB MD was associated with worse Behavioral Regulation (r=.327, p=.018) and more Attention Problems (r=.278, p=.046); higher left and right SLF MD was associated with Sluggish Cognitive Tempo (r=.363, p=.008, r=.408, p=.003, respectively).
Conclusions:
Children with TBI, particularly msTBI, were rated as having cognitive slowing; while other anticipated group differences in neurobehavioral outcomes were not found, this appears driven by milder difficulties in cmTBI and OI groups. In fact, across CBCL and BRIEF subscales, children with msTBI were rated as approaching or exceeding a full standard deviation deficit based on normative data. TBI severity was also associated with white matter microstructure and cross-domain associations linked microstructure with observable neurobehavioral morbidities, suggesting a possible mechanism post-injury. Future longitudinal studies would be useful to examine the temporal evolution of deficits.
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a prevalent cause of long-term morbidity in children and adolescents and can lead to persistent difficulties with social and behavioral function. TBI may impact brain structures that support social cognition, social perception, and day-to-day social interactions—termed the social brain network (SBN). We examined differences in links among the SBN and regions of interest from other neural networks thought to support social outcomes, i.e., the default mode network (DMN) and salience network (SN). Furthermore, we examined how differences in co-activation among the SBN and these other key networks were associated with ratings of social and day-to-day adaptive outcomes.
Participants and Methods:
Participants included children and adolescents with moderate to severe TBI (msTBI; n=11, Mage=11.78, 6 male), complicated-mild TBI (cmTBI; n=12, Mage=12.59, 9 male), and orthopedic injury (OI; n=22, Mage=11.69, 15 male). Participants underwent resting-state functional MRI on a 3Tesla Siemens Prisma scanner. Parents rated their child’s social and adaptive function on the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) and Adaptive Behavior Assessment System-Third Edition (ABAS-3). Resting-state connectivity was assessed using the CONN Toolbox, including preprocessing, denoising, and alignment to the participants’ processed T1 MPRAGE sequence followed by seed-to-voxel analysis using a SBN mask and targeted regions of interest within the DMN and SN. Individual-level r-to-z correlations were extracted from resulting clusters of co-activation with the SBN mask and exported into SPSSv28.0 for integration with behavioral data.
Results:
One-way ANOVAs used to examine group differences in social and adaptive outcome revealed significant group differences in CBCL Social Competence (F=4.49, p=.019) and all composite scores on the ABAS-3 (Fs=3.78 to 5.17, ps=.031 to .010). In each domain, children with msTBI were rated as having elevated difficulties relative to cmTBI or OI, whereas cmTBI and OI groups did not differ. Connectivity also differed significantly between groups, with children with OI demonstrating greater connectivity between the SBN and the anterior cingulate cortex of the SN (t=5.19, p(FDR)<.0001) and posterior cingulate cortex of the DMN (f=4.30, p(FDR)<.001) than children with msTBI. Children with cmTBI also showed greater connectivity between the SBN and left temporal pole of the DMN (t=7.45, p(FDR)<.000001) than children with msTBI. Degree of connectivity between the SBN and posterior cingulate was significantly positively correlated across all domains of adaptive function (rs=.451 to .504, ps=.010 to .003), whereas degree of connectivity between the SBN and left temporal pole was strongly positively related to Social Competence (a=.633, p=.006) and conceptual adaptive skills on the ABAS (A=.437, p=.037).
Conclusions:
Our findings provide insights into the neural substrates of social and adaptive morbidity after pediatric TBI, particularly msTBI, by linking alterations in connectivity among the SBN, DMN, and SN with measures of social and adaptive outcome. While the posterior cingulate was broadly associated with adaptive outcome, the temporal pole was particularly strongly associated with social competence. This may reflect the diverse functions and high degree of interconnectivity of the posterior cingulate, which contributes to various cognitive and attentional processes, relative to the strong amygdala/limbic connections of the temporal pole.
From the safety inside vehicles, Knowsley Safari offers visitors a close-up encounter with captive olive baboons. As exiting vehicles may be contaminated with baboon stool, a comprehensive coprological inspection was conducted to address public health concerns. Baboon stools were obtained from vehicles, and sleeping areas, inclusive of video analysis of baboon–vehicle interactions. A purposely selected 4-day sampling period enabled comparative inspections of 2662 vehicles, with a total of 669 baboon stools examined (371 from vehicles and 298 from sleeping areas). As informed by our pilot study, front-line diagnostic methods were: QUIK-CHEK rapid diagnostic test (RDT) (Giardia and Cryptosporidium), Kato–Katz coproscopy (Trichuris) and charcoal culture (Strongyloides). Some 13.9% of vehicles were contaminated with baboon stool. Prevalence of giardiasis was 37.4% while cryptosporidiosis was <0.01%, however, an absence of faecal cysts by quality control coproscopy, alongside lower than the expected levels of Giardia-specific DNA, judged RDT results as misleading, grossly overestimating prevalence. Prevalence of trichuriasis was 48.0% and strongyloidiasis was 13.7%, a first report of Strongyloides fuelleborni in UK. We advise regular blanket administration(s) of anthelminthics to the colony, exploring pour-on formulations, thereafter, smaller-scale indicator surveys would be adequate.
Activating relevant responses is a key function of automatic processes in De Neys's model; however, what determines the order or magnitude of such activation is ambiguous. Focusing on recently developed sequential sampling models of choice, we argue that proactive control shapes response generation but does not cleanly fit into De Neys's automatic-deliberative distinction, highlighting the need for further model development.
As part of surveillance of snail-borne trematodiasis in Knowsley Safari (KS), Prescot, United Kingdom, a collection was made in July 2021 of various planorbid (n = 173) and lymnaeid (n = 218) snails. These were taken from 15 purposely selected freshwater habitats. In the laboratory emergent trematode cercariae, often from single snails, were identified by morphology with a sub-set, of those most accessible, later characterized by cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (cox1) DNA barcoding. Two schistosomatid cercariae were of special note in the context of human cercarial dermatitis (HCD), Bilharziella polonica emergent from Planorbarius corneus and Trichobilharzia spp. emergent from Ampullacaena balthica. The former schistosomatid was last reported in the United Kingdom over 50 years ago. From cox1 analyses, the latter likely consisted of two taxa, Trichobilharzia anseri, a first report in the United Kingdom, and a hitherto unnamed genetic lineage having some affiliation with Trichobilharzia longicauda. The chronobiology of emergent cercariae from P. corneus was assessed, with the vertical swimming rate of B. polonica measured. We provide a brief risk appraisal of HCD for public activities typically undertaken within KS educational and recreational programmes.
Pietraszewski contends that group representations that rely on a “containment metaphor” fail to adequately capture phenomena of group dynamics such as shifts in allegiances. We argue, in contrast, that social categories allow for computationally efficient, richly structured, and flexible group representations that explain some of the most intriguing aspects of social group behaviour.
Algorithmic bias arises in machine learning when models that may have reasonable overall accuracy are biased in favor of ‘good’ outcomes for one side of a sensitive category, for example gender or race. The bias will manifest as an underestimation of good outcomes for the under-represented minority. In a sense, we should not be surprised that a model might be biased when it has not been ‘asked’ not to be; reasonable accuracy can be achieved by ignoring the under-represented minority. A common strategy to address this issue is to include fairness as a component in the learning objective. In this paper, we consider including fairness as an additional criterion in model training and propose a multi-objective optimization strategy using Pareto Simulated Annealing that optimizes for both accuracy and underestimation bias. Our experiments show that this strategy can identify families of models with members representing different accuracy/fairness tradeoffs. We demonstrate the effectiveness of this strategy on two synthetic and two real-world datasets.
Sleep is vital for health and wellbeing across the lifecourse. Ethnic differences have been observed with regards to the prevalence and predictors of self-reported sleep problems. An understanding of sleep experiences with ageing and across ethnicities is required to better support older people. Open-ended interviews were conducted with 23 people living in Aotearoa/New Zealand aged 61–92 years (12 Māori and 11 non-Māori) concerning current sleep status, changes over their lifecourse and personal strategies for supporting good sleep. Participants typically expressed satisfaction with current sleep (usually pertaining to duration) or feelings that sleep was compromised (usually pertaining to waking function). Comparisons to a socially perceived ‘ideal’ sleep were common, with sleep transitions presented as a gradual and accepted part of ageing. Participants resisted medicalising sleep disruptions in older age. While participants were aware of ways to enhance their sleep, many acknowledged engaging in practices that undermined it. Unique insights from some Māori participants indicated that sleep disruptions were not so readily pathologised compared to Western views and that sleeplessness could provide opportunity for cultural or spiritual connection. Common narratives underpinning the themes were: ‘You don't need as much sleep when you're older’, ‘Sleep just fits in’ and ‘Having the time of my life’. Findings provide personal experiences and cultural interpretations relating to sleep and ageing. This provides the foundation for future participatory research to co-design sleep health messages which are meaningful for ageing well across ethnicities.
Although rationalization about one's own beliefs and actions can improve an individual's future decisions, beliefs can provide other benefits unrelated to their epistemic truth value, such as group cohesion and identity. A model of resource-rational cognition that accounts for these benefits may explain unexpected and seemingly irrational thought patterns, such as belief polarization.
Structured, empirically supported psychological interventions are lacking for patients who require organ transplantation. This stage IA psychotherapy development project developed and tested the feasibility, acceptability, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of an 8-week group cognitive behavioral stress management intervention adapted for patients with end-stage liver disease awaiting liver transplantation.
Method
Twenty-nine English-speaking United Network for Organ Sharing–registered patients with end-stage liver disease from a single transplantation center enrolled in 8-week, group cognitive-behavioral liver stress management and relaxation training intervention adapted for patients with end-stage liver disease. Patients completed pre- and postintervention surveys that included the Beck Depression Inventory II and the Beck Anxiety Inventory. Feasibility, acceptability, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy were assessed.
Result
Attendance rate was 69.40%. The intervention was rated as “good” to “excellent” by 100% of participants who completed the postintervention survey in teaching them new skills to relax and to cope with stress, and by 94.12% of participants in helping them feel supported while waiting for a liver transplant. No adverse events were recorded over the course of treatment. Attrition was 13.79%. Anxious and depressive symptoms were not statistically different after the intervention.
Significance of results
The liver stress management and relaxation training intervention is feasible, acceptable, and tolerable to end-stage liver disease patients within a transplant clinic setting. Anxious and depressive symptoms remained stable postintervention. Randomized controlled trials are needed to study the intervention's effectiveness in this population.
People want to form impressions of others based on their moral behaviours, but the most diagnostic behaviours are rarely seen. Therefore, societies develop symbolic forms of moral behaviour such as conventional rituals and games, which are used to predict how others are likely to act in more serious moral situations. This framework helps explain why everyday behaviours are often moralized.
While the field of emotions research has benefited from new developments in neuroscience, many theoretical questions remain unsolved. We propose that integrating our iterative reprocessing (IR) framework with the passive frame theory (PFT) may help unify competing theoretical perspectives of emotion. Specifically, we propose that PFT and the IR framework offer a point of origin for emotional experience.
The eastern bettong Bettongia gaimardi, a potoroid marsupial, has been extinct on the Australian mainland since the 1920s. Sixty adult bettongs were reintroduced from the island of Tasmania to two predator-free fenced reserves on mainland Australia. We examined baseline health parameters (body weight, haematology and biochemistry, parasites and infectious disease exposure) in a subset of 30 (13 male, 17 female) individuals at translocation and again at 12–24 months post-reintroduction. The mean body weight increased significantly post-reintroduction but there were no significant differences in body weight between the two reintroduction sites or between the sexes in response to reintroduction. Differences were evident in multiple haematological and biochemical variables post-reintroduction but there were few differences between the two reintroduced populations or between the sexes in response to reintroduction. Ectoparasite assemblages differed, with five of 13 species failing to persist, and an additional four species were identified post-reintroduction. None of the bettongs had detectable antibodies to the alphaherpesviruses Macropodid herpesvirus 1 and 2 post-reintroduction, including one individual that was seropositive at translocation. Similarly, the novel gammaherpesvirus potoroid herpesvirus 1 was not detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in any of the bettongs post-reintroduction, including one individual that was PCR-positive at translocation. None of the bettongs had detectable antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii either at translocation or post-reintroduction. Our data demonstrate changing baseline health parameters in eastern bettongs following reintroduction to the Australian mainland are suggestive of improved health in the reintroduced populations, and provide additional metrics for assessing the response of macropodoids to reintroduction.
The goals of empirical research in social psychology can be differentiated into three broad categories: demonstration, causation, and explanation. Research performed for the purpose of demonstration is conducted to establish empirically the existence of a phenomenon or relationship. The tripartite distinction between internal, external, and construct validity, provides the basis for organizing the discussion of validity issues. Construct validity refers to inferences made at both stages of research linking concepts to operations. The chapter uses the concept of demand characteristics to illustrate the difference between methodological confounds (which affect construct validity) and methodological artifacts. Construct validity represents one form of generalizing from the observed results of an empirical study to conclusions that go beyond the results themselves. The debate includes discussions of whether there are necessary trade-offs among the various aspects of validity or whether it is possible to demand that research maximize internal, external, and construct validity simultaneously.
White matter matures with age and is important for the efficient transmission of neuronal signals. Consequently, white matter growth may underlie the development of cognitive processes important for learning, including the speed of information processing. To dissect the relationship between white matter structure and information processing speed, we administered a reaction time task (finger abduction in response to visual cue) to 27 typically developing, right-handed children aged 4 to 13. Magnetoencephalography and Diffusion Tensor Imaging were used to delineate white matter connections implicated in visual-motor information processing. Fractional anisotropy (FA) and radial diffusivity (RD) of the optic radiation in the left hemisphere, and FA and mean diffusivity (MD) of the optic radiation in the right hemisphere changed significantly with age. MD and RD decreased with age in the right inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, and bilaterally in the cortico-spinal tracts. No age-related changes were evident in the inferior longitudinal fasciculus. FA of the cortico-spinal tract in the left hemisphere and MD of the inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus of the right hemisphere contributed uniquely beyond the effect of age in accounting for reaction time performance of the right hand. Our findings support the role of white matter maturation in the development of information processing speed. (JINS, 2013, 19, 1–14)
Renowned economic historian and clergyman William Cunningham (1849–1919) published this work in 1896, which is considered a companion volume to his seminal Essay on Western Civilisation. Educated at Edinburgh, Cambridge and Tübingen, Cunningham wrote widely on theology and economics. He was a Cambridge lecturer and fellow at Trinity, Professor of Economics at King's College London, a teacher at Harvard, a founding fellow of the British Academy, and President of the Royal Historical Society. Favouring historical empiricism over deductive theory, his work, labelled neo-mercantilist, was against laissez-faire and favoured economic regulation, social religion, and conservative incremental change. This book outlines these views as part of an analysis of the basic units of economic life - exchange, possessions, money, credit, selling, price, labour, trade, profit, interest, rent, wages - and how these interact within capitalism. The work strongly influenced contemporary thought and remains relevant in the historiography of economics.