人类记忆
计算机科学
社会记忆
认知心理学
数据科学
认知科学
心理学
神经科学
认知
作者
Jack L. Andrews,Karina Grunewald,Susanne Schweizer
标识
DOI:10.1098/rspb.2024.1930
摘要
As a social species, humans live in complexly bounded social groups. In order to navigate these networks, humans rely on a set of social-cognitive processes, including social working memory. Here, we designed a novel network memory task to study working memory for social versus non-social network information across 241 participants (18-65 years) in a tightly controlled, preregistered study. We show that humans demonstrate a working memory advantage for social, relative to non-social, network information. We also observed a self-relevant positivity bias, but an 'other' negativity bias. These findings are interpreted in the context of an evolutionary need to belong to one's social group, to identify risks to one's social safety and to appropriately track one's social status within a complex network of social relationships.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI