Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others
Previous research has suggested that the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) supports judgments of social distance, with greater activity observed in response to targets judged to be closer to each other (Yamakawa, Kanai, Matsumura, & Naito, 2009). Amongst other stimuli, activity in the IPS appears to be...
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Universidad de San Buenaventura
2013
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oai:doaj.org-article:7ac61c8321b54af6a3ff46c9b53abdb02021-11-25T02:22:48ZIntraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others10.21500/20112084.7212011-20842011-7922https://doaj.org/article/7ac61c8321b54af6a3ff46c9b53abdb02013-10-01T00:00:00Zhttps://revistas.usb.edu.co/index.php/IJPR/article/view/721https://doaj.org/toc/2011-2084https://doaj.org/toc/2011-7922Previous research has suggested that the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) supports judgments of social distance, with greater activity observed in response to targets judged to be closer to each other (Yamakawa, Kanai, Matsumura, & Naito, 2009). Amongst other stimuli, activity in the IPS appears to be responsive to targets varying in social status (Chiao et al., 2009; Cloutier, Ambady, Meagher, & Gabrieli, 2012). The current project examined brain responses during explicit self-referential social status judgments of targets varying in either financial or moral status. Using an event-related fMRI design, participants viewed photographs of male faces paired with distinct levels of financial or moral status. During the task, participants were asked to explicitly identify each target’s status in relation to their own. Focusing on IPS activity, results from whole-brain and region of interest analyses revealed an interaction between social status types and levels. The implications of these results are discussed with respect to our current understanding of the impact of social status on the neural substrates of person perception.Jasmin CloutierIvo GyurovskiUniversidad de San BuenaventuraarticleIPSfMRIsocial distancesocial statusperson perceptionPsychologyBF1-990ENESInternational Journal of Psychological Research, Vol 6 (2013) |
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IPS fMRI social distance social status person perception Psychology BF1-990 |
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IPS fMRI social distance social status person perception Psychology BF1-990 Jasmin Cloutier Ivo Gyurovski Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
description |
Previous research has suggested that the intraparietal sulcus (IPS) supports judgments of social distance, with greater activity observed in response to targets judged to be closer to each other (Yamakawa, Kanai, Matsumura, & Naito, 2009). Amongst other stimuli, activity in the IPS appears to be responsive to targets varying in social status (Chiao et al., 2009; Cloutier, Ambady, Meagher, & Gabrieli, 2012). The current project examined brain responses during explicit self-referential social status judgments of targets varying in either financial or moral status. Using an event-related fMRI design, participants viewed photographs of male faces paired with distinct levels of financial or moral status. During the task, participants were asked to explicitly identify each target’s status in relation to their own. Focusing on IPS activity, results from whole-brain and region of interest analyses revealed an interaction between social status types and levels. The implications of these results are discussed with respect to our current understanding of the impact of social status on the neural substrates of person perception. |
format |
article |
author |
Jasmin Cloutier Ivo Gyurovski |
author_facet |
Jasmin Cloutier Ivo Gyurovski |
author_sort |
Jasmin Cloutier |
title |
Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
title_short |
Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
title_full |
Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
title_fullStr |
Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
title_full_unstemmed |
Intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
title_sort |
intraparietal sulcus activity during explicit self-referential social status judgments about others |
publisher |
Universidad de San Buenaventura |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/7ac61c8321b54af6a3ff46c9b53abdb0 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT jasmincloutier intraparietalsulcusactivityduringexplicitselfreferentialsocialstatusjudgmentsaboutothers AT ivogyurovski intraparietalsulcusactivityduringexplicitselfreferentialsocialstatusjudgmentsaboutothers |
_version_ |
1718414701351665664 |