Users of ±3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA; ‘ecstasy’) report prosocial effects such as sociability and empathy. Supporting these apparently unique social effects, data from controlled laboratory studies indicate that MDMA alters social feelings, information processing, and behavior in humans, and social behavior in rodents. Here, we review this growing body of evidence. In rodents, MDMA increases passive prosocial behavior (adjacent lying) and social reward while decreasing aggression, effects that may involve serotonin 1A receptor mediated oxytocin release interacting with vasopressin receptor 1A. In humans, MDMA increases plasma oxytocin and produces feelings of social affiliation. It decreases identification of negative facial expressions (cognitive empathy) and blunts responses to social rejection, while enhancing responses to others’ positive emotions (emotional empathy) and increasing social approach. Thus, consistent with drug folklore, laboratory administration of MDMA robustly alters social processing in humans and increases social approach in humans and animals. Effects are consistent with increased sociability, with mixed evidence about enhanced empathy. These neurobiologically-complex prosocial effects likely motivate recreational ecstasy use.
During navigation, the hippocampus represents physical places like coordinates on a map; similar location-like signals have been seen in sensory and concept spaces. It is unclear just how general this hippocampal place code is, however: does it map places in wholly non-perceivable spaces, without locations being instructed or reinforced and during navigation-like behavior? To search for such a signal, we imaged participants' brains while they played a naturalistic, narrative-based social interaction game, and modeled their relationships as a kind of navigation through social space. Two independent samples showed hippocampal place-like signals in both region-based and whole-brain representational similarity analyses, as well as decoding and average pattern similarity analyses; the effects were not explained by other measures of the behavior or task information. We also replicated and extended previous findings of hippocampal tracking of the egocentric angle in social space. These results are the first demonstration of complete domain generality in hippocampal place representation.
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