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1 warding experiences (caloric consumption and social interaction).
2 ice procedure (drug versus palatable food or social interaction).
3 and social approach, can be learned through social interaction.
4 is characterized by profound impairments of social interaction.
5 ocial media and chronicling the evolution of social interaction.
6 ferentiated between craving food and craving social interaction.
7 d sense of increased well-being and enhanced social interaction.
8 within the context of a real-time reciprocal social interaction.
9 n colaughter does not match the valence of a social interaction.
10 a dyadic movement task promoting spontaneous social interaction.
11 majority - is a fundamental feature of human social interaction.
12 ions of GABAergic cells and deterioration of social interaction.
13 erstanding of how human minds connect during social interaction.
14 ning new identities is crucial for effective social interaction.
15 have abnormalities of locomotor activity or social interaction.
16 emember faces is one of the pillars of human social interaction.
17 frontal cortex that are dependent on ongoing social interaction.
18 cus on NVC as it pertains to individuals and social interaction.
19 l representations, primarily instantiated on social interaction.
20 behavioral data and applied it to a dynamic social interaction.
21 timulating mPFC D2R+ neurons disrupts normal social interaction.
22 associated with reduced intentions to pursue social interaction.
23 grounded also in internalized linguistic and social interaction.
24 rtant for intentional display of emotions in social interaction.
25 dictive drug (heroin or methamphetamine) and social interaction.
26 M of empathy by eliminating the influence of social interaction.
27 ter isolation, people felt lonely and craved social interaction.
28 , resulting in deterred learning ability and social interaction.
29 investigation of the multiscale dynamics of social interaction.
30 elated to subsequent memory for the original social interaction.
31 s in behaviors such as learning, memory, and social interactions.
32 of emotional behavior is essential for human social interactions.
33 formist or too greedy, markers fail to shape social interactions.
34 ereby helps to interpret unusual outcomes of social interactions.
35 ranscend species and specific mechanisms for social interactions.
36 asure social reward associated with same-sex social interactions.
37 s the salience of both positive and negative social interactions.
38 cal identity and is critically important for social interactions.
39 lays a fundamental role in the regulation of social interactions.
40 imotor transformations that underlie natural social interactions.
41 dentity from faces is crucial for successful social interactions.
42 eficits, reduced anxiety levels, and reduced social interactions.
43 he same sense of touch, especially for their social interactions.
44 ning frequently overlook the role of ongoing social interactions.
45 weighing different utilities during repeated social interactions.
46 encies at the intersection of energy use and social interactions.
47 Facial mimicry is a central feature of human social interactions.
48 ng to eye cues plays a key role during human social interactions.
49 points in gathering information from violent social interactions.
50 e range of human hearing, during close-range social interactions.
51 nderstanding their gaze behavior during live social interactions.
52 tion as dense hubs of energy consumption and social interactions.
53 s of bats engaged in a wide range of natural social interactions.
54 iding an insight into how the brain controls social interactions.
55 tance provided to immigrants during everyday social interactions.
56 dy may explain some of their difficulties in social interactions.
57 nary stasis may occur for traits involved in social interactions.
58 n guide our decisions as we navigate complex social interactions.
59 nal signals, tune motivation, and coordinate social interactions.
60 e hypothalamus and medial amygdala modulates social interactions.
61 ) are believed to play an important role for social interactions.
62 enhanced visual awareness, attentiveness, or social interactions.
63 ssion and an absence of aggression in future social interactions.
64 ry of mind plays a fundamental role in human social interactions.
65 r day, and the calls have prominent roles in social interactions.
66 eties, individuals invest time and energy in social interactions.
67 veness) as potential partners in cooperative social interactions.
68 f COVID-19, probably during conversations in social interactions.
69 t different vocal signals than mice avoiding social interactions.
70 s due to its wide applicability in capturing social interactions.
71 ed to accurately recognize actions and track social interactions.
72 motivation, whereas inhibiting them reduces social interactions.
73 oes interbrain synchrony causally facilitate social interaction?
74 o be isolated from each other, do they crave social interactions?
76 into CeL and trained them to lever press for social interaction (6 d) and then for methamphetamine in
79 of NPY or a Y(5) receptor agonist increased social interaction, a validated behavior for anxiety, an
80 herapists may focus on increasing meaningful social interactions, addressing concerns related to trea
81 mined videos recorded during semi-structured social interaction administered as the primary outcome i
89 which predominantly affect males and exhibit social interaction and communication deficits and repeti
91 jected to psychosocial stress showed reduced social interaction and impaired working memory, and thes
95 ral abnormalities of ASD, including impaired social interaction and repetitive behaviors, and reduced
96 erted U relationship between the duration of social interaction and social reward, mediated by oxytoc
97 core body temperature, and social behavior (social interaction and ultrasonic vocalizations) were ex
104 stimuli and touch by others is necessary for social interactions and for a coherent concept of "self.
105 dominant and subordinate males during normal social interactions and in a more complex group consensu
106 he duration of exposure and the closeness of social interactions and is modulated by demographic and
107 n from a set of principles; rather, repeated social interactions and logic constraints among statemen
108 behavioural changes in mice were limited to social interactions and mild working-memory defects, the
109 In this Perspective, we describe how animal social interactions and networks may provide channels fo
110 l circuitry that underlies female aggressive social interactions and provides tools for their manipul
111 cognitive information, avoidance of negative social interactions and reduced reward sensitivity, as w
112 of gut microbial communities is slower than social interactions and shift-working, and the impact of
113 n ecosystem function parameters) depended on social interactions and spatial self-organization on par
116 s decreased spontaneous locomotion, impaired social interaction, and decreased marble-burying behavio
117 0 for 14 days reduced hyperarousal, improved social interaction, and improved natural behaviors such
118 ehavioral deficits in cognitive flexibility, social interaction, and novel object recognition (NOR).
122 ural correlation covaried with the extent of social interactions, and an increase in correlation prec
123 ogical systems that support food production, social interactions, and biodiversity conservation.
125 epressive symptoms, quality and frequency of social interactions, and educational attainment were sig
126 ance individuals maintain from others during social interactions, and into which intrusion by others
127 These flies display increased fear, impaired social interactions, and locomotion traits we associate
128 genic mice displayed normal social approach, social interactions, and repetitive motor stereotypies t
129 te of the artworks, the dynamical network of social interactions, and the interaction patterns betwee
132 nces of behaviours that are exhibited during social interactions are especially sensitive to their lo
138 orate a multi-brain framework that considers social interaction as an integrated network of neural sy
139 we operationalized the affective aspects of social interactions as ratings of interpersonal closenes
140 ngly, interbrain correlations predict future social interactions as well as dominance relationships i
141 ts provide evidence that, while differential social interactions at localised scales influence patter
142 are also revealing new intricacies of animal social interactions at spatial and temporal resolutions
144 fer depending on the 'who, what, and how' of social interactions, because these factors are likely to
146 al signals during 30 minutes of unrestrained social interaction between a female and a single male or
147 eatments typically occur in the context of a social interaction between healthcare providers and pati
149 yclidine-induced hyperactivity and increased social interaction between unfamiliar rats without alter
152 ps observe and remember a complex network of social interactions between individual conspecifics rath
154 care, suggesting that selection arising from social interactions between parents and offspring may un
158 on, or joint action, is a crucial element of social interaction, but the dynamics of nonverbal inform
159 Oxytocin (OT) is widely known for promoting social interactions, but there is growing appreciation t
160 to play a critical role in the evolution of social interactions by promoting diversity or driving ac
162 In addition, experimental studies show that social interactions can causally alter animal physiology
165 ctivity during bond formation, revealing how social interactions can recruit brain reward systems to
166 ns (NAc), a brain area involved in mediating social interactions, chemomagnetic modulation increases
167 al impairments in multiple domains including social interaction, cognitive function, acoustic startle
168 nterpersonal neural entrainment during early social interaction, considering two ways of measuring en
169 f work investigating psychopathic traits and social interactions, considering not only the environmen
172 trate that transplantation rescues recipient social interaction deficits without correcting a common
173 generate excitatory synaptic dysfunction and social interaction deficits, whereas selective enhanceme
175 uggest that the neural mechanisms supporting social interaction differ from those involved in social
178 d second, it is often tied to agreement-like social interactions (e.g., promises) in which breaches p
179 but lack critical characteristics common to social interactions (e.g., social presence, dynamic visu
180 ides new insights into the impact of MDMA on social interactions, emphasizing the important role of t
182 in prefrontal cortex, abnormal baseline and social interaction-evoked electroencephalogram (EEG) sig
183 cultural differences in face scanning during social interactions for the first time, with British/Iri
185 These findings suggest that the degree of social interaction found in Drosophila is insufficient t
186 gent-based model that incorporates fights as social interactions governing a dynamic ranking, communa
189 ate the behavioural and neural mechanisms of social interactions; however, further theoretical and me
190 orebrain Cul3 deletion displayed autism-like social interaction impairment and sensory-gating deficie
191 cedure to investigate the role of volitional social interaction in drug addiction and other psychiatr
197 ansfer, takes advantage of various levels of social interactions in ant colonies to disseminate a tox
198 ach other and regularly engage in reciprocal social interactions in joint endeavors to coordinate the
200 valenced emotions may play a crucial role in social interactions in many species and thus, an underst
203 s, highlighting the importance of restricted social interactions in the evolution of reproductive spe
204 tensive SCIN ablation results in exacerbated social interactions, in which normal social contacts wer
205 MDMA can enhance the experience of positive social interactions; in this case, pleasantness of physi
208 e core behavioral features of ASD (decreased social interaction, increased repetitive behavior, and a
209 n a vagus nerve-dependent manner and rescues social interaction-induced synaptic plasticity in the ve
211 Sickness effects might also depend on how a social interaction is defined (e.g. the number of groomi
214 whereby selection on genes expressed only in social interactions is diluted by generations of inactiv
215 om rodents and humans suggests that same-sex social interactions may be more rewarding in females tha
217 ry has been very influential in studying how social interactions mediated by public 'goods' or 'bads'
220 eotypes, but in the complexity of real world social interactions, most of our individuating informati
221 the compliance with another set of rules for social interactions, namely the fairness norm, in Wester
222 are captured by social network analysis, and social interaction networks (SINs) have been described f
223 haviour, automated detection and analysis of social interaction networks have fundamentally transform
224 owed vigilance-like behavior and deficits in social interactions, novel object investigation, and nes
227 proach, with 24 h monitoring of activity and social interaction of groups of mice in a home-cage envi
229 cr types shape the evolutionary dynamics and social interactions of phage populations in natural comm
230 onstrates the protective effect of rewarding social interaction on heroin self-administration and inc
231 nd that males modify singing behavior during social interactions on a subsecond time course that rese
233 environment, promoting physical activity and social interactions, or a standard environment constitut
235 , the rats were tested in the open field and social interaction paradigms and processed for immunosta
239 iling to engage in usual patterns of digital social interaction, providing a route to early intervent
240 ritorial aggression; we further hypothesized social interactions, reciprocally, would influence food
243 SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Adaptively navigating social interactions requires an integration of prior exp
244 lopmental disorder characterized by impaired social interactions, restricted interests, and repetitiv
245 orrelation is an inherent feature of natural social interactions, reveal the domain of neural activit
246 In contrast, after the disaster, frequent social interactions reverted back to predicting improved
249 der (ASD) is characterized by dysfunction in social interactions, stereotypical behaviours and high c
250 Using this model, we showed that rewarding social interaction suppresses drug self-administration,
252 fferent from controls, but in the reciprocal social interaction test, CASPR2-IgG injected mice showed
255 g), sociability (3-chamber social and direct social interaction tests), and communication (ultrasonic
257 ng a discrete-trial choice between drugs and social interaction that causes voluntary abstinence from
258 we know little about the characteristics of social interactions that are rewarding or the neural mec
259 le of shared susceptibilities, behaviours or social interactions that distinguish specific links in t
261 of 90 participants as they viewed images of social interactions that varied with respect to violence
262 tion of our lives are spent participating in social interactions, the investigation of the neural mec
264 ments in the investigation of 2-person human social interaction to investigate interaction difficulti
265 d negative social expectancies-imagining new social interactions to be rewarding versus threatening-a
267 a specific larval visual pathway involved in social interactions undergoes experience-dependent modif
269 Here, we describe a protocol for operant social interaction using a discrete-trial choice between
270 aimed at revealing the neural correlates of social interactions using a three-person (or triadic) fM
271 oblem by analyzing the genome-wide impact of social interactions using genome sequences from 67 Dicty
272 h other, offering the prospect for modifying social interactions via the introduction of artificial a
275 y, a model reflecting perceived frequency of social interaction was present beginning at ~110 ms, eve
276 To determine whether CA2 activity encodes social interactions, we recorded extracellularly from CA
278 ocomotion, coordination, memory, anxiety and social interactions, were established before the injecti
279 ikely explained by the conditional nature of social interactions, whereby selection on genes expresse
280 can strongly influence adult phenotypes and social interactions, which in turn affect key evolutiona
281 its acquisition is promoted by its value in social interactions, which is evident across phylogeny a
282 cognitive abilities of individuals and their social interactions, which we argue relate to difference
283 el in which rats press a lever for rewarding social interaction with a peer and then choose between a
284 onaggressive) social approach and reciprocal social interactions with a conspecific-comprise a constr
285 adults (in Japan) who were engaged in dyadic social interactions with a local research assistant.
286 roach was not significantly different, fewer social interactions with an estrous female were noted in
288 t as hunger state escalated, resident animal social interactions with either a female or male intrude
289 formance in APP/PS1 mice fed a Hfd, impaired social interactions with either APP/PS1 genotype or a Hf
291 aviors in a familial context, exhibited less social interactions with novel conspecifics, and showed
292 ess, depression symptoms, feelings of anger, social interactions with other ethnic groups, functional
294 e first career movement could be mediated by social interactions with professionals in the stage feel
295 d c-Fos immunohistochemistry, we report that social interactions with stressed PN30 conspecifics elic
298 nsing (QS) is the central mechanism by which social interactions within the bacterial community contr
299 d the most informative features of a violent social interaction would be faces, points of contact, an
300 heir facial features is at the core of human social interaction, yet this ability varies widely withi