APS

30th APS Annual Convention

Interpersonal Linkage in Multiple Behavioral and Biological Systems—Evidence From Human and Nonhuman Primates

Thursday, May 24, 2018 · San Francisco, CA

Oral · Social

As social animals, humans and non-human possess numerous behavioral and biological systems that support linkage with social partners. This symposium will highlight recent advances concerning neural, physiological, behavioral and experiential interpersonal linkage in normal healthy and clinical human populations, as well as physiological linkage in socially bonded non-human primates.

Chairs & Discussants

  • Robert LevensonChair
    University of California, Berkeley
  • Kuan-Hua ChenCoChair
    University of California, Berkeley
  • Robert LevensonDiscussant
    University of California, Berkeley

Presentations

  1. Shared Patterns of Neural Activity during Narrative Recall Reveal Shared Structure in Memory Representations across IndividualsYuan Chang Leong, Janice Chen, Christopher Honey, Chung Yong, Kenneth Norman, Uri Hasson
  2. I Feel Your Pain: Sadness Contagion in Experience and PhysiologyErika Siegel, Tessa West, Wendy Wendes
  3. Evidence of Physiological Linkage in between Pair Mates in Titi Monkeys (Callicebus cupreus), a Non-Human Primate Model of Adult Attachment BondingEmily Rothwell, Madison Dufek, Robert Levenson, Karen Bales
  4. Diminished Linkage in Positive Emotional Behaviors between Patients with Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia and Their CaregiversKuan-Hua Chen, Anna Sapozhnikova, Casey Brown, Bruce Miller, Barbara Fredrickson, Robert Levenson