the study also looked at the social dynamics of the group, and found that just as in humans, some bats were more sociable than others. the bats who were better at socializing caused more brain synchrony within the group, while the ones who spent more time on their own, away from the larger group, got a less accurate neural representation of their identity from the others.
“it seems that the behaviour of the out-of-cluster bats really shifts their neural representation in the brains of the other bats,” rose said.
yartsev added that understanding why some people find socializing easy while others are consistently awkward and ostracized could offer significant help in improving our own mental health.
“often, in neuroscience, we like to take a simplified approach and focus on one component of a complex process at a time,” yartsev said. “but in reality, the social world is complex… our brains, and those of animals, have evolved for, and constantly struggle with, the complexity of real life. i personally believe that to truly understand the brain, we need to embrace this complexity, rather than fear it.”
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we're more like bats than we might think