Speaker details

Eshin Jolly

Dartmouth College

February 20, 2023

Title:
People as Contexts: A Relational Account of Person Representation and Memory

Abstract:
How do we represent and remember others? A long history of laboratory-based social cognitive neuroscience research has emphasized how individuals build representations of others through the use of person-specific attributes (e.g traits, mental states). But outside the lab, we often learn about others in rich social contexts comprised of dynamic social interactions that influence behavior. Inspired by work in non-social domains, in this talk I will propose the idea that just like space and time, people can act as contexts and the relationships between individuals serve as the structural basis for social memory and neural representations. I will provide preliminary support for this idea using a naturalistic fMRI study in which individuals watched several hours of a character-drama depicting interactions between 11 main characters and later performed a series of social memory tasks. Using a variety of analytic and empirical approaches, we find that the representation and recall of individuals is organized around their relationships with others, rather than the similarity of person or situation specific attributes such as trait impressions, social groups, locations, or actions. Together, these findings suggest that in a naturalistic unconstrained context, a key aspect of social cognition is inferring and representing how individuals are connected to each other, rather than focusing primarily on the attributes we may use to describe them.

American Sign language (ASL) interpretation and
closed captioning will be provided.

Partner institutions

Dartmouth
College

Center for Cognitive Neuroscience

University of
Pennsylvania

Yale
University

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Princeton
University

Harvard
University

Columbia
University

Gallaudet
University