Login / Signup

Understanding the neurobiology of social behavior through exploring brain-wide dynamics of neural activity.

Adèle PhalipShai NetserShlomo Wagner
Published in: Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews (2024)
Social behavior is highly complex and adaptable. It can be divided into multiple temporal stages: detection, approach, and consummatory behavior. Each stage can be further divided into several cognitive and behavioral processes, such as perceiving social cues, evaluating the social and non-social contexts, and recognizing the internal/emotional state of others. Recent studies have identified numerous brain-wide circuits implicated in social behavior and suggested the existence of partially overlapping functional brain networks underlying various types of social and non-social behavior. However, understanding the brain-wide dynamics underlying social behavior remains challenging, and several brain-scale dynamics (macro-, meso-, and micro-scale levels) need to be integrated. Here, we suggest leveraging new tools and concepts to explore social brain networks and integrate those different levels. These include studying the expression of immediate-early genes throughout the entire brain to impartially define the structure of the neuronal networks involved in a given social behavior. Then, network dynamics could be investigated using electrode arrays or multi-channel fiber photometry. Finally, tools like high-density silicon probes and miniscopes can probe neural activity in specific areas and across neuronal populations at the single-cell level.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • resting state
  • white matter
  • cerebral ischemia
  • single cell
  • high density
  • multiple sclerosis
  • small molecule
  • quantum dots
  • sensitive detection
  • solid state