In the SMU Social and Clinical Neuroscience (SCN) lab, we study the way people think about, understand, and react to other people. In particular, we study social connection in the form of social cognition and empathy, as well as social disconnection such as reactions to interpersonal stress. We do this by examining interactions between biological, psychological, and environmental factors that contribute to individual differences in social processes and mental health. 

biological studies

In our biological studies, we integrate social and clinical psychology with neuroscientific methods including neuroendocrine measurement, pharmacological administration, genetics, and neuroimaging. Our main focus is on the role of the neuropeptides oxytocin and vasopressin. This work is helping to understand the complexities of these neuropeptides and how the initial research on oxytocin painted an overly simplistic explanation of its role in human social cognition and behavior (i.e., branding it as the "love hormone"). 

Current projects in this area address the following questions:

Can oxytocin and vasopressin be used as biomarkers for social sensitivity and interpersonal functioning?

What are the neural effects of oxytocin and vasopressin administration on social processes?

psychological studies

In our psychological studies (i.e., without biological measures), we have spent the last several years examining the relation between social anxiety and social cognition, as well as numerous other studies examining self-reported and behavioral empathic processes.

Current projects in this area address the following questions:

Through the use of numerous standardized behavioral assessments of social cognition, we have been systematically trying to answer the question, does social anxiety impair social cognitive processing?

We have also been conducting studies that seek to disentangle the relation between social cognition and several individual differences including dispositional empathy, self-referential processing, and alexithymia. In addition, we have run several studies that try to answer whether empathic processes for people and music are related at the behavioral and neural level.


Open science is good
— Everyone

We believe in open science and preregister our studies in the SCN Lab. Have a look: osf.io/r5a4q


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