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The Social Brain and the Nature of Relationships

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Title: The Social Brain and the Nature of Relationships


1
The Social Brain and the Nature of Relationships
  • Robin Dunbar
  • Institute of Cognitive
  • Evolutionary Anthropology
  • University of Oxford

2
What Makes Humans SO Different?
  • Humans differ only marginally from
  • other great apes in anatomy, genetics and
  • ecology and much everyday behaviour
  • Only substantive differences are in the
  • world of the imagination
  • Religion
  • Story-telling
  • ..We do, they dont
  • These are a crucial part of the mechanisms
  • needed to enforce social cohesion

3
Tinbergens Four Whys
  • Phylogeny WHEN?
  • Function WHY?
  • Ultimate mechanisms
  • behavioural ecology
  • Social psychology
  • with backbone?
  • Ontogeny HOW?
  • Mechanisms WHAT?
  • Proximate mechanisms
  • modular mind
  • Cognition with
  • backbone?

4
The Social Brain Hypothesis
  • An explanation for why primates have such big
    brains (compared to all other species)
  • Primates live in unusually complex societies, and
    this is computationally very demanding
  • Group size as an index of social complexity
  • Neocortex ratio as an index of brain size

5
The Monogamous Brain?
Anthropoid Primates
Carnivores
Artiodactyls
Bats
Birds
Anthropoid Primates are the odd one out
Monogamy is cognitively costly?
Shultz Dunbar (2007)
6
Primate Social Style is Different
  • Prosimians are more like other mammals
  • Anthropoids seem to have more bonded groups
  • Primates seem to have generalised bondedness of
    pairbonds to other non-reproductive dyads

Shultz Dunbat (2007)
7
Humans and the Social Brain Hypothesis
  • Predicted group size for humans is 150
  • Dunbars Number

8
HumanSocial Groups
Reverse Small World Experiments Killworth et
al (1984)
  • These all have mean sizes of
  • 100-200
  • Neolithic villages 6500 BC 150-200
  • Modern armies (company) 180
  • Hutterite communities 107
  • Nebraska Amish parishes 113
  • business organisation lt200
  • ideal church congregations lt200
  • Doomsday Book villages 150
  • C18th English villages 160
  • GoreTex Incs structure 150
  • Research sub-disciplines 100-200
  • Small world experiments 134
  • Hunter-Gatherer communities 148
  • Xmas card networks 154

Hunter-Gatherer Societies Dunbar (1993)
Individual Tribes
Xmas Card Networks Hill Dunbar (2003)
9
Intimacy, Frequency and Trust
  • Relationship between frequency of contact and
    intimacy
  • Trust and obligation seem to be important

Hill Dunbar (2003)
10
The Fractal Periodicity of Human Group Sizes
Sizes of Hunter-Gatherer Groupings
Peak at ?5.4
Social Groupings Database N60
Hamilton et al (2007)
Peak at ?5.2
Xmas Card Database
Scaling ratio exp(2p/?)
3.2 and 3.3
Zhou, Sornette, Hill Dunbar (2005)
11
The Expanding Circles
  • Your social world consists of layers of
  • relationships
  • with 150 as a core number
  • but extending beyond to
  • 500, 1500,
  • and 5300 (according to
  • Plato, 350BC)..
  • BUT.
  • are the layers created by
  • frequency of
  • interaction
  • cognition capacity for
  • emotional closeness

Intensity
EGO
5
15
50
150
12
Networks Have Structural Biases
  • Social networks tend to be gender-biased
  • males have more male friends, females have more
    female friends

Female-only networks Belgian dataset
13
Kinship Takes Priority!
  • Upper bound lies at 150
  • Priority is given to kin over non-kin
  • those who come from big extended families have
    fewer friends
  • This is NOT true at the inner layers of the
    network (i.e. 15 layer)

Belgian dataset
14
Stable Family, Fragile Friends
Stay
KIN
Move
Friends
Change in Network Layer
Change over Time
Kin
Friends
0 9
18 months
15
How to Prevent Relationships Decaying
  • Change in contact frequency
  • Change in activities done together

Kin
Friends
16
Sex Difference in How Relationships are Serviced
Change in Emotional Closeness months 0-9
Roberts Dunbar (2010)
  • by change in contact frequency
  • by change in activity score

17
Obesity Clusters in Networks
  • The Framingham Heart Study
  • Probability of becoming obese increases by
  • 57 if a friend becomes obese,
  • 40 if a sibling becomes obese,
  • 37 if spouse becomes obese
  • independent of genetic relatedness and proximity
    to a McDonalds

Christakis 2007
18
Happiness is Contagious, too
Happy Intermediate Unhappy
Fowler et al (2008)
19
How We Get Higher Levels of Organisation
  • Demands for information flow may be critical to
    structure
  • Military organisation seems to reflect same
    structure
  • Badgesranks (hierarchy) ensure information flow
    thru the system
  • Line management essential when organisation gt200
  • Crucial role of language

Military Organisation
Australia Netherlands 2000
1939 Section c.16
Platoon 30-60 50 Company
100-225 150-180 Battalion
550-1000 700-750 Brigade/Regiment
2500-5000 2200-2600 Division
10,000-20,000 6000-7000
20
War of the Spanish Succession c.1702
  • European armies, though varying widely,
    nonetheless show much the same structure with
    much the same numbers

21
Social Bonding Primate-Style
  • Primate social bonds seem to involve two
    distinct components
  • An emotionally intense component
  • grooming
  • A cognitive component
  • brain size cognition

22
The Role for Social Cognition
  • Social cognition as the likely mechanism
  • Intentionality as a reflexively hierarchical
    sequence of belief states
  • that may be very costly in information
    processing terms

The Levels of Intentionality
23
The Limits to Intentionality...
Correct
  • A natural limit at 5th order intentionality
  • I intend that you believe that Fred understands
    that we want him to be willing to do
    something level 5

Intentionality Level
Kinderman, Dunbar Bentall (1998).
24
Mentalising Tasks are Harder
TASKS mentalising memory
  • In an fMRI analysis
  • Significant contrasts
  • mentalising gt memory
  • with a parametric effect of intentionality level
  • in 3 core regions
  • involved in Theory of mind
  • orbito-frontal PFC
  • TPJ
  • temporal pole

A Reaction Time Experiment Mentalising vs
Memory Questions (balanced for words, verbs,
nouns, adjectives and people, and controlling for
order)
accuracy p 0.919 RT p lt 0.05
Lewis, Birch, Dunbar (in prep)
25
Cognitive Limits to Sociality?
  • Achievable intentionality level indexed from
    stories
  • 5th order seems to be the limit
  • Intentionality correlates
  • with size of support clique
  • clique size no. of core
  • intimate relationships

Stiller Dunbar 2007
26
Insights from Neuroimaging
Powell et al (submitted a, b)
  • In a stereological analysis of gross volume best
    predictor of network size and intentional
    competence is medial orbitofrontal PFC volume
  • In a fine-grained VBM (voxel) analysis overlap
    of network size and intentional competence in the
    orbitovental PFC

Lewis et al (submitted)
27
Why Time is Important
                 
  • Grooming as the bonding agent in primates
  • Grooming time is a linear function of group size
  • with an upper limit at about 20 of total daytime

Dunbar (1991) Lehmann, Korstjens Dunbar (2007)
28
Why Does Grooming Work?
                 
An experimental study with monkeys Opiates block
social drive Opiate-blockers enhance social drive
Sal
Keverne et al 1979
  • endorphins are relaxing
  • They create a psycho-pharmacological environment
    for building trust?

29
Grooming Time in Humans?
                 
  • If we bonded our groups using the standard
    primate mechanism
  • .we would have to spend ?43 of the day grooming

30
Grooming Time in Primates
                 
  • In fact, we spend only 20 of our time in social
    interaction
  • ..from a sample of 7 societies from Dundee to
    New Guinea
  • Language might help bridge that gap
  • .but where does the endorphin kick come from?

31
Language to the Rescue..?
Natural Social Groupings
  • Language allows
  • exchange of information about state of network
  • larger broadcast group
  • multitasking talk and walk
  • reinforcing group membership
  • reputation management

.at Dartingtons Ways With Words
32
Three Ways to Bridge the Gap?
Religion and its rituals
Modern humans
Archaic humans
The Bonding Gap
H. erectus
Music and dance
Australopiths
Laughter a cross-cultural trait shared with
chimpanzees
33
Some Tentative Evidence.
Singing and Laughter stimulate endorphins
P0.559 plt0.001
V. Barra 2003
  • Procedure
  • pain test
  • video/activity
  • pain re-test

J. Stowe 2000 G. Partridge 2003
34
LaughterThe Best Medicine?
A human universal
In a Public Goods Game Dictator Game Ss were
more generous to strangers (but not friends)
after watching a comedy video
van Vugt et al (submitted)
35
An Opium for the Masses?
  • Religious practices are often well suited to
    stimulate endorphins

Whirling dervishes an Islamic Sufi sect
  • Endorphins
  • make you relaxed
  • may trigger the release of
  • oxytocins (creating sense
  • of euphoric love)
  • enhance sense of
  • communality
  • positively influence
  • immune system

Medieval flagellants
Berninis Ecstacy of St Theresa of Avila
36
So.why not just get your kicks on your own?
Plenty of people do. BUT doing it together
seems to ramp up the effects
37
Synchony Ramps up the Endorphins
Change in pain threshold before and after 45 mins
rowing work-out on ergometers in the gym Alone
vs in a virtual boat
Alone Group Alone Group
38
Religion at the Limits of Cognition?
  • Belief as a personal phenomenon
  • I believe that God wants us to act
  • with righteous intent
    3
  • Belief as a social phenomenon
  • I intend that you believe that God
  • wants us to act with righteous intent 4
  • . BUT why should you care?
  • Belief as a communal phenomenon
  • I intend that you understand that we believe
    that
  • God wants us to act with righteous intent 5
  • does theology provide the incentive to keep
    turning up?

39
The Story-Tellers Art
Othello - An Everyday Story of Deception
  • BUT Shakespeare had to do SIX

6
5 Cassio
Iago
Othello
3
  • The audience
  • has to do FIVE
  • orders of
  • intentionality

2
1
4
Stories (especially origins stories) are an
integral part of community-bonding
Desdemona
40
Conclusions
  • An evolutionary approach is NOT an alternative to
    other social science approaches its an
    integrating framework
  • An evolutionary approach provides a powerful tool
    for exploring human behaviour because it makes us
    ask questions
  • It is important to complete the explanatory
    loop to show both mechanism and fitness
    consequences IF YOU CAN
  • There are cognitive constraints on our
    behaviour.
  • .these have significant implications for how we
    organise our societies
  • Laughter, music and religion may have evolved to
    bond large communities BUT they are still small
    scale effects

41
With Thanks to.
  • Susanne Shultz
  • Penny Lewis
  • Sam Roberts
  • Holly Arrow
  • Hiroko Kudo
  • Julia Lehmann
  • Didier Sornette
  • Russell Hill
  • Alex Bentley
  • Mark van Vugt
  • Charlie Hardy
  • Amy Birch
  • Joanne Powell
  • Rachel Browne
  • Neil Roberts
  • Boguslaw Pawlowski
  • Wei Zhou

For funding British Academy EPSRC ESRC Leverhulm
e Trust EU-FP7
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