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All social relationships rely upon an organism's ability to remember conspecifics. The ability to recognize individual conspecifics is crucial in many aspects of an animal's social behavior and this type of memory is critical for the stability of relationships and survival. Individual recognition requires the association of individually distinct information with memories of past experiences. Such recognition may be a specially evolved type of learning and memory and in many species olfaction is important for such recognition. To further understand this complex cognitive function, we developed…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
All social relationships rely upon an organism's ability to remember conspecifics. The ability to recognize individual conspecifics is crucial in many aspects of an animal's social behavior and this type of memory is critical for the stability of relationships and survival. Individual recognition requires the association of individually distinct information with memories of past experiences. Such recognition may be a specially evolved type of learning and memory and in many species olfaction is important for such recognition. To further understand this complex cognitive function, we developed new behavioral methods for the investigation of individual recognition in golden hamsters and used these methods to study social memory retrieval after aggressive and sexual interactions. These studies provide some clues to further study the neural circuits underlying individual recognition and these methods can be useful to further understand human social memory and social disorders.
Autorenporträt
The desire to be a scientist has been in my mind since childhood. I earned my PhD at Cornell University in 2003. After postdoctoral training at Columbia University, I joined Psychology Department, National Taiwan University and set up my own lab. My current research focuses on social neuroscience and mouse models of psychiatric disorders.