Transforming social perspectives with cognitive maps

Author:

Arzy Shahar12,Kaplan Raphael3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and the Department of Cognitive Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem , Jerusalem 91120, Israel

2. Department of Neurology, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical School , Jerusalem 91120, Israel

3. Department of Basic Psychology, Clinical Psychology, and Psychobiology, Universitat Jaume I , Castelló de la Plana 12071, Spain

Abstract

Abstract Growing evidence suggests that cognitive maps represent relations between social knowledge similar to how spatial locations are represented in an environment. Notably, the extant human medial temporal lobe literature assumes associations between social stimuli follow a linear associative mapping from an egocentric viewpoint to a cognitive map. Yet, this form of associative social memory does not account for a core phenomenon of social interactions in which social knowledge learned via comparisons to the self, other individuals or social networks are assimilated within a single frame of reference. We argue that hippocampal–entorhinal coordinate transformations, known to integrate egocentric and allocentric spatial cues, inform social perspective switching between the self and others. We present evidence that the hippocampal formation helps inform social interactions by relating self vs other social attribute comparisons to society in general, which can afford rapid and flexible assimilation of knowledge about the relationship between the self and social networks of varying proximities. We conclude by discussing the ramifications of cognitive maps in aiding this social perspective transformation process in states of health and disease.

Funder

Generalitat Valenciana

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

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