Social behavior is behavior among two or more organisms within the same species, and encompasses any behavior in which one member affects the other. This is due to an interaction among those members.
Social behavior can be seen as similar to an exchange of goods, with
the expectation that when you give, you will receive the same.
This behavior can be effected by both the qualities of the individual
and the environmental (situational) factors. Therefore, social behavior
arises as a result of an interaction between the two—the organism and
its environment. This means that, in regards to humans, social behavior
can be determined by both the individual characteristics of the person,
and the situation they are in.
A major aspect of social behavior is communication, which is the basis for survival and reproduction.
Social behavior is said to be determined by two different processes,
that can either work together or oppose one another. The dual-systems
model of reflective and impulsive determinants of social behavior came
out of the realization that behavior cannot just be determined by one
single factor. Instead, behavior can arise by those consciously behaving
(where there is an awareness and intent), or by pure impulse. These
factors that determine behavior can work in different situations and
moments, and can even oppose one another. While at times one can behave
with a specific goal in mind, other times they can behave without
rational control, and driven by impulse instead.
There are also distinctions between different types of social behavior, such as mundane
versus defensive social behavior. Mundane social behavior is a result
of interactions in day-to-day life, and are behaviors learned as one is
exposed to those different situations. On the other hand, defensive
behavior arises out of impulse, when one is faced with conflicting
desires.
The Development of Social Behavior
Social behavior
constantly changes as one continues to grow and develop, reaching
different stages of life. The development of behavior is deeply tied
with the biological and cognitive changes one is experiencing at any
given time. This creates general patterns of social behavior development
in humans.
Just as social behavior is influenced by both the situation and an
individual's characteristics, the development of behavior is due to the
combination of the two as well—the temperament of the child along with the settings they are exposed to.
Culture
(parents and individuals that influence socialization in children) play
a large role in the development of a child's social behavior, as the
parents or caregivers are typically those who decide the settings and
situations that the child is exposed to. These various settings the
child is placed in (for example, the playground and classroom) form
habits of interaction and behavior insomuch as the child being exposed
to certain settings more frequently than others. What takes particular
precedence in the influence of the setting are the people that the child
must interact with—their age, sex, and at times culture.
Emotions also play a large role in the development of social
behavior, as they are intertwined with the way an individual behaves.
Through social interactions, emotion is understood through various
verbal and nonverbal displays, and thus plays a large role in
communication. Many of the processes that occur in the brain and
underlay emotion often greatly correlate with the processes that are
needed for social behavior as well. A major aspect of interaction is
understanding how the other person thinks and feels, and being able to
detect emotional states becomes necessary for individuals to effectively
interact with one another and behave socially.
As the child continues to gain social information, their behavior develops accordingly.
One must learn how to behave according to the interactions and people
relevant to a certain setting, and therefore begin to intuitively know
the appropriate form of social interaction depending on the situation.
Therefore, behavior is constantly changing as required, and maturity
brings this on. A child must learn to balance their own desires with
those of the people they interact with, and this ability to correctly
respond to contextual cues and understand the intentions and desires of
another person improves with age.
That being said, the individual characteristics of the child (their
temperament) is important to understanding how the individual learns
social behaviors and cues given to them, and this learnability is not
consistent across all children.
Patterns of Development Across the Lifespan
When
studying patterns of biological development across the human lifespan,
there are certain patterns that are well-maintained across humans. These
patterns can often correspond with social development, and biological
changes lead to respective changes in interactions.
In pre and post-natal infancy, the behavior of the infant
is correlated with that of the caregiver. In infancy, there is already a
development of the awareness of a stranger, in which case the
individual is able to identify and distinguish between people.
Come childhood, the individual begins to attend more to
their peers, and communication begins to take a verbal form. One also
begins to classify themselves on the basis of their gender and other
qualities salient about themselves, like race and age.
When the child reaches school age, one typically becomes
more aware of the structure of society in regards to gender, and how
their own gender plays a role in this. They become more and more reliant
on verbal forms of communication, and more likely to form groups and
become aware of their own role within the group.
By puberty, general relations among same and opposite sex
individuals are much more salient, and individuals begin to behave
according to the norms of these situations. With increasing awareness of
their sex and stereotypes that go along with it, the individual begins
to choose how much they align with these stereotypes, and behaves either
according to those stereotypes or not. This is also the time that
individuals more often form sexual pairs.
Once the individual reaches childrearing age, one must
begin to undergo changes within the own behavior in accordance to major
life-changes of a developing family. The potential new child requires
the parent to modify their behavior to accommodate a new member of the
family.
Come senescence and retirement, behavior is more
stable as the individual has often established their social circle
(whatever it may be) and is more committed to their social structure.
Neural and Biological Correlates of Social Behavior
Neural Correlates
With the advent of the field social cognitive neuroscience
came interest in studying social behavior's correlates within the
brain, to see what is happening beneath the surface as organisms act in a
social manner.
Although there is debate on which particular regions of the brain are
responsible for social behavior, some have claimed that the
paracingulate cortex is activated when one person is thinking about the
motives or aims of another, a means of understanding the social world
and behaving accordingly. The medial prefrontal lobe has also been seen
to have activation during social cognition Research has discovered through studies on rhesus monkeys that the amygdala,
a region known for expressing fear, was activated specifically when the
monkeys were faced with a social situation they had never been in
before. This region of the brain was shown to be sensitive to the fear
that comes with a novel social situation, inhibiting social interaction.
Another form of studying the brain regions that may be
responsible for social behavior has been through looking at patients
with brain injuries who have an impairment in social behavior. Lesions
in the prefrontal cortex
that occurred in adulthood can effect the functioning of social
behavior. When these lesions or a dysfunction in the prefrontal cortex
occur in infancy/early on in life, the development of proper moral and
social behavior is effected and thus atypical.
Biological Correlates
Along with neural correlates, research has investigated what happens
within the body (and potentially modulates) social behavior. Vasopressin is a posterior pituitary hormone
that is seen to potentially play a role in affiliation for young rats.
Along with young rats, vasopressin has also been associated with
paternal behavior in prairie voles. Efforts have been made to connect animal research to humans, and found that vasopressin may play a role in the social responses of males in human research.
Oxytocin
has also been seen to be correlated with positive social behavior, and
elevated levels have been shown to potentially help improve social
behavior that may have been suppressed due to stress. Thus, targeting
levels of oxytocin may play a role in interventions of disorders that
deal with atypical social behavior.
Along with vasopressin, serotonin
has also been inspected in relation to social behavior in humans. It
was found to be associated with human feelings of social connection, and
we see a drop in serotonin when one is socially isolated or has
feelings of social isolation. Serotonin has also been associated with
social confidence.
Affect and Social Behavior
Positive affect (emotion) has been seen to have a large impact on social behavior, particularly by inducing more helping behavior, cooperation, and sociability. Studies have shown that even subtly inducing positive affect
within individuals caused greater social behavior and helping. This
phenomenon, however, is not one-directional. Just as positive affect can
influence social behavior, social behavior can have an influence on
positive affect.
Electronic Media and Social Behavior
Social
behavior has typically been seen as a changing of behaviors relevant to
the situation at hand, acting appropriately with the setting one is in.
However, with the advent of electronic media,
people began to find themselves in situations they may have not been
exposed to in everyday life. Novel situations and information presented
through electronic media has formed interactions that are completely new
to people. While people typically behaved in line with their setting in
face-to-face interaction, the lines have become blurred when it comes
to electronic media. This has led to a cascade of results, as gender
norms started to merge, and people were coming in contact with
information they had never been exposed to through face-to-face
interaction. A political leader could no longer tailor a speech to just
one audience, for their speech would be translated and heard by anyone
through the media. People can no longer play drastically different roles
when put in different situations, because the situations overlap more
as information is more readily available. Communication flows more
quickly and fluidly through media, causing behavior to merge
accordingly.
Media has also been shown to have an impact on promoting different
types of social behavior, such as prosocial and aggressive behavior. For
example, violence shown through the media has been seen to lead to more
aggressive behavior in its viewers. Research has also been done investigating how media portraying positive social acts, prosocial behavior, could lead to more helping behavior
in its viewers. The general learning model was established to study how
this process of translating media into behavior works, and why.
This model suggests a link between positive media with prosocial
behavior and violent media with aggressive behavior, and posits that
this is mediated by the characteristics of the individual watching along
with the situation they are in. This model also presents the notion
that when one is exposed to the same type of media for long periods of
time, this could even lead to changes within their personality traits,
as they are forming different sets of knowledge and may be behaving
accordingly.
In various studies looking specifically at how video games with
prosocial content effect behavior, it was shown that exposure influenced
subsequent helping behavior in the video-game player.[23]
The processes that underlay this effect point to prosocial thoughts
being more readily available after playing a video game related to this,
and thus the person playing the game is more likely to behave
accordingly.
These effects were not only found with video games, but also with
music, as people listening to songs involving aggression and violence in
the lyrics were more likely to act in an aggressive manner.
Likewise, people listening to songs related to prosocial acts (relative
to a song with neutral lyrics) were shown to express greater helping
behaviors and more empathy afterwards.
When these songs were played at restaurants, it even led to an increase
in tips given (relative to those who heard neutral lyrics).
Aggressive and Violent Behavior
Aggression is an important social behavior that can have both
negative consequences (in a social interaction) and adaptive
consequences (adaptive in humans and other primates for survival). There
are many differences in aggressive behavior, and a lot of these
differences are sex-difference based.
Verbal, Coverbal, and Nonverbal Social Behavior
Verbal and Coverbal Behaviors
Although most animals can communicate nonverbally, humans have the ability to communicate with both verbal and nonverbal behavior. Verbal behavior is the content one's spoken word.
Verbal and nonverbal behavior intersect in what is known as coverbal
behavior, which is nonverbal behavior that contribute to the meaning of
verbal speech (i.e. hand gestures used to emphasize the importance of
what someone is saying).
Although the spoken words convey meaning in and of themselves, one
cannot dismiss the coverbal behaviors that accompany the words, as they
place great emphasis on the thought and importance contributing to the
verbal speech. Therefore, the verbal behaviors and gestures that accompany it work together to make up a conversation.
Although many have posited this idea that nonverbal behavior
accompanying speech serves an important role in communication, it is
important to note that not all researchers agree. However, in most literature on gestures, we see that unlike body language, gestures can accompany speech in ways that bring inner thoughts to life (often thoughts unable to be expressed verbally). Gestures (coverbal behaviors) and speech occur simultaneously, and develop along the same trajectory within children as well.
Nonverbal Behaviors
Behaviors that include any change in facial expression or body movement constitute the meaning of nonverbal behavior. Communicative nonverbal behavior include facial and body expressions that are intentionally meant to convey a message to those who are meant to receive it. Nonverbal behavior can serve a specific purpose (i.e. to convey a message), or can be more of an impulse/reflex. Paul Ekman,
an influential psychologist, investigated both verbal and nonverbal
behavior (and their role in communication) a great deal, emphasizing how
difficult it is to empirically test such behaviors. Nonverbal
cues can serve the function of conveying a message, thought, or emotion
both to the person viewing the behavior and the person sending these
cues.
Disorders Involving Impairments in Social Behavior
Social Anxiety Disorder
Social Anxiety Disorder
is a phobic disorder characterized by a fear of being judged by others,
which manifests itself as a fear of people in general. Due to this
pervasive fear of embarrassing oneself in front of others, it causes
those affected to avoid interactions with other people at all costs.
People who classify as having Social Anxiety Disorder typically have
low self-esteem due to being highly critical of themselves, and thus
avoid contact for fear of being "exposed" as unlikable. Efforts to find the neural correlates associated with Social Anxiety Disorder have turned to functional neuroimaging, which has found that Social Anxiety Disorder is greatly associated with hyperactivity of the amygdala, the brain area activated during fear.
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder mainly identified by its symptoms of inattention,
hyperactivity, and impulsivity. Hyperactivity-Impulsivity may lead to
hampered social interactions, as one who displays these symptoms may be
socially intrusive, unable to maintain personal space, and talk over
others. The majority of children that display symptoms of ADHD also have problems with their social behavior.
Although children may not identify these social problems within
themselves, their caregivers, adults in their lives, and other children
their age frequently report it.
Children who have ADHD tend to be more frequently and quickly rejected
by their peers, and their social skills tend to be less developed than
those of the others in their age-group.
Early social behavior difficulties within childhood can lead to
further, more serious problems in adulthood (i.e. unruly behavior,
problems with school, work, and potentially substance abuse).
Studies have shown that while it seems as though those with ADHD have
the information of social norms (according to their age) readily
available, they have a hard time translating this knowledge to their own
behavior.
Autism Spectrum
Autism Spectrum Disorder is a neurodevelopmental
disorder that affects the functioning of social interaction and
communication. People who fall on the autism spectrum scale may have
difficulties in understanding social cues and the emotional states
of others. Due to this, one may find it difficult to modulate behavior
according to the situation, and act according to the setting's
standards. Along the spectrum of autism includes Aspergers Syndrome,
which contains the atypical functioning of social interaction and
communication seen in autism, but without a clinically significant delay
of cognitive and language abilities. Research is still being done to investigate which brain regions are involved in Autism Spectrum Disorder.
In regards to abnormalities that often occur in Autism Spectrum
Disorder, one who classifies as among the spectrum may have a series of
symptoms, such as difficulty or inability to maintain eye-contact with
another person, and communicate via face and body expression. One may
have a hard time forming relationships with their peers, and have a
difficult time forming mutual interests and sharing a common excitement
with others. Language may be impaired to those on the low-end of the
spectrum, which affects conversation and communication with others.
Learning Disability
Learning disabilities are often defined as a specific deficit in academic achievement; however, research has shown that with a learning disability can come social skill deficits as well. The National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities now include delays in social interaction within the definition of learning disability.
A growing body of research has studied the close connection between
academic and social delays, and has seen that those with learning
disabilities are at greater risk for experiencing social skill deficits
than those who do not have an academic achievement delay.
There is not enough evidence to claim that academic deficits are the
cause of subsequent social delays, however, there is a strong
correlation between the two.