S
Steve W. C. Chang
Researcher at Yale University
Publications - 71
Citations - 3800
Steve W. C. Chang is an academic researcher from Yale University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Prefrontal cortex & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 60 publications receiving 3006 citations. Previous affiliations of Steve W. C. Chang include Duke University & Washington University in St. Louis.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Stimulus onset quenches neural variability: a widespread cortical phenomenon
Mark M. Churchland,Byron M. Yu,Byron M. Yu,John P. Cunningham,Leo P. Sugrue,Leo P. Sugrue,Marlene R. Cohen,Marlene R. Cohen,Greg S. Corrado,Greg S. Corrado,William T. Newsome,William T. Newsome,Andrew M. Clark,Paymon Hosseini,Benjamin B. Scott,David C. Bradley,Matthew A. Smith,Adam Kohn,Adam Kohn,J. Anthony Movshon,Katherine M. Armstrong,Tirin Moore,Steve W. C. Chang,Lawrence H. Snyder,Stephen G. Lisberger,Nicholas J. Priebe,Ian M. Finn,David Ferster,Stephen I. Ryu,Gopal Santhanam,Maneesh Sahani,Krishna V. Shenoy +31 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors measured neural variability in 13 extracellularly recorded datasets and one intra-cellularly recorded dataset from seven areas spanning the four cortical lobes in monkeys and cats and found that stimulus onset caused a decline in neural variability.
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The Anterior Cingulate Gyrus and Social Cognition: Tracking the Motivation of Others
TL;DR: This model, based on vicarious motivation and error processing, provides a unified account of neurophysiological and neuroimaging evidence that the ACCg is sensitive to costs, benefits, and errors during social interactions.
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Neuronal reference frames for social decisions in primate frontal cortex.
TL;DR: In this network of received (OFC) and foregone (ACCs) reward signaling, ACCg emerged as an important nexus for the computation of shared experience and social reward.
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Inhaled oxytocin amplifies both vicarious reinforcement and self reinforcement in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)
TL;DR: Exogenous, inhaled OT causally promotes social donation behavior in rhesus monkeys, as it does in more egalitarian and monogamous ones, like prairie voles and humans, when there is no perceived cost to self.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neural mechanisms of social decision-making in the primate amygdala.
Steve W. C. Chang,Nicholas A. Fagan,Koji Toda,Koji Toda,Amanda V. Utevsky,John M. Pearson,Michael L. Platt +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown in monkeys playing a modified dictator game, in which one individual can donate or withhold rewards from another, that basolateral amygdala neurons signaled social preferences both across trials and across days, endorsing the hypothesis that OT regulates social behavior, in part, via amygdala neuromodulation.