KPMCF: A Learning Model for Measuring Social Relationship Strength

Author(s):  
Youliang Zhong ◽  
Xiaoming Zheng ◽  
Jian Yang ◽  
Mehmet A. Orgun ◽  
Yan Wang
2016 ◽  
Vol 214 ◽  
pp. 927-934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liyan Xiong ◽  
Yin Lei ◽  
Weichun Huang ◽  
Xiaohui Huang ◽  
Maosheng Zhong

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taylor Dixon Guthrie ◽  
Youri Y. Benadjaoud ◽  
Robert Chavez

Within our societies, humans form cooperative groups with diverse levels of relationship quality among individual group members. In establishing relationships with others, we use attitudes and beliefs about group members and the group as a whole to establish relationships with particular members of our social networks. However, we have yet to understand how brain responses to group members facilitate relationship quality between pairs of individuals. We address this here using a round-robin interpersonal perception paradigm in which each participant was both a perceiver and target for every other member of their group, in a set of 20 unique groups of between 5 and 6 members in each (total N = 111). Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we show that measures of social relationship strength modulate the brain-to-brain multivoxel similarity patterns between pairs of participants’ responses when perceiving other members of their group in regions of the brain implicated in social cognition. These results provide evidence for a brain mechanism of social cognitive processes serving interpersonal relationship strength among group members.


2018 ◽  
Vol 285 (1871) ◽  
pp. 20171934 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel T. Blumstein ◽  
Dana M. Williams ◽  
Alexandra N. Lim ◽  
Svenja Kroeger ◽  
Julien G. A. Martin

Humans in strong social relationships are more likely to live longer because social relationships may buffer stressors and thus have protective effects. However, a shortcoming of human studies is that they often rely on self-reporting of these relationships. By contrast, observational studies of non-human animals permit detailed analyses of the specific nature of social relationships. Thus, discoveries that some social animals live longer and healthier lives if they are involved in social grooming, forage together or have more affiliative associates emphasizes the potential importance of social relationships on health and longevity. Previous studies have focused on the impact of social metrics on longevity in obligately social species. However, if sociality indeed has a key role in longevity, we might expect that affiliative relationships should also influence longevity in less social species. We focused on socially flexible yellow-bellied marmots ( Marmota flaviventer ) and asked whether female longevity covaries with the specific nature of social relationships. We quantified social relationships with social network statistics that were based on affiliative interactions, and then estimated the correlation between longevity and sociality using bivariate models. We found a significant negative phenotypic correlation between affiliative social relationship strength and longevity; marmots with greater degree, closeness and those with a greater negative average shortest path length died at younger ages. We conclude that sociality plays an important role in longevity, but how it does so may depend on whether a species is obligately or facultatively social.


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