The world seems different in a social context: A neural network analysis of human experimental data
Author:
Tsfasman MariaORCID,
Philippsen Anja,
Mazzola CarloORCID,
Thill SergeORCID,
Sciutti Alessandra,
Nagai YukieORCID
Abstract
Human perception and behavior are affected by the situational context, in particular during social interactions. A recent study demonstrated that humans perceive visual stimuli differently depending on whether they do the task by themselves or together with a robot. Specifically, it was found that the central tendency effect is stronger in social than in non-social task settings. The particular nature of such behavioral changes induced by social interaction, and their underlying cognitive processes in the human brain are, however, still not well understood. In this paper, we address this question by training an artificial neural network inspired by the predictive coding theory on the above behavioral data set. Using this computational model, we investigate whether the change in behavior that was caused by the situational context in the human experiment could be explained by continuous modifications of a parameter expressing how strongly sensory and prior information affect perception. We demonstrate that it is possible to replicate human behavioral data in both individual and social task settings by modifying the precision of prior and sensory signals, indicating that social and non-social task settings might in fact exist on a continuum. At the same time, an analysis of the neural activation traces of the trained networks provides evidence that information is coded in fundamentally different ways in the network in the individual and in the social conditions. Our results emphasize the importance of computational replications of behavioral data for generating hypotheses on the underlying cognitive mechanisms of shared perception and may provide inspiration for follow-up studies in the field of neuroscience.
Funder
Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology
Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
H2020 European Research Council
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Multidisciplinary
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1. Editorial: Affective shared perception;Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience;2022-09-09