Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents

Social allostasis is a mechanism of adaptation that permits individuals to dynamically adapt their physiology to changing physical and social conditions. Oxytocin (OT) is widely considered to be one of the hormones that drives and adapts social behaviours. While its precise effects remain unclear, t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Imran Khan, Lola Cañamero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/67
id doaj-2e90b1072ca440ee90b5795af5bab01a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2e90b1072ca440ee90b5795af5bab01a2020-11-24T20:41:46ZengMDPI AGMultimodal Technologies and Interaction2414-40882018-10-01246710.3390/mti2040067mti2040067Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied AgentsImran Khan0Lola Cañamero1Embodied Emotion, Cognition and (Inter-)Action Lab, School of Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield AL10 9AB, UKEmbodied Emotion, Cognition and (Inter-)Action Lab, School of Computer Science, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield AL10 9AB, UKSocial allostasis is a mechanism of adaptation that permits individuals to dynamically adapt their physiology to changing physical and social conditions. Oxytocin (OT) is widely considered to be one of the hormones that drives and adapts social behaviours. While its precise effects remain unclear, two areas where OT may promote adaptation are by affecting social salience, and affecting internal responses of performing social behaviours. Working towards a model of dynamic adaptation through social allostasis in simulated embodied agents, and extending our previous work studying OT-inspired modulation of social salience, we present a model and experiments that investigate the effects and adaptive value of allostatic processes based on hormonal (OT) modulation of affective elements of a social behaviour. In particular, we investigate and test the effects and adaptive value of modulating the degree of satisfaction of tactile contact in a social motivation context in a small simulated agent society across different environmental challenges (related to availability of food) and effects of OT modulation of social salience as a motivational incentive. Our results show that the effects of these modulatory mechanisms have different (positive or negative) adaptive value across different groups and under different environmental circumstance in a way that supports the context-dependent nature of OT, put forward by the interactionist approach to OT modulation in biological agents. In terms of simulation models, this means that OT modulation of the mechanisms that we have described should be context-dependent in order to maximise viability of our socially adaptive agents, illustrating the relevance of social allostasis mechanisms.http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/67embodied agentsembodied affectembodied interactionsocial allostasisoxytocinhomeostasissocial saliencesocial adaptationsocial simulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Imran Khan
Lola Cañamero
spellingShingle Imran Khan
Lola Cañamero
Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
embodied agents
embodied affect
embodied interaction
social allostasis
oxytocin
homeostasis
social salience
social adaptation
social simulation
author_facet Imran Khan
Lola Cañamero
author_sort Imran Khan
title Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
title_short Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
title_full Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
title_fullStr Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
title_full_unstemmed Modelling Adaptation through Social Allostasis: Modulating the Effects of Social Touch with Oxytocin in Embodied Agents
title_sort modelling adaptation through social allostasis: modulating the effects of social touch with oxytocin in embodied agents
publisher MDPI AG
series Multimodal Technologies and Interaction
issn 2414-4088
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Social allostasis is a mechanism of adaptation that permits individuals to dynamically adapt their physiology to changing physical and social conditions. Oxytocin (OT) is widely considered to be one of the hormones that drives and adapts social behaviours. While its precise effects remain unclear, two areas where OT may promote adaptation are by affecting social salience, and affecting internal responses of performing social behaviours. Working towards a model of dynamic adaptation through social allostasis in simulated embodied agents, and extending our previous work studying OT-inspired modulation of social salience, we present a model and experiments that investigate the effects and adaptive value of allostatic processes based on hormonal (OT) modulation of affective elements of a social behaviour. In particular, we investigate and test the effects and adaptive value of modulating the degree of satisfaction of tactile contact in a social motivation context in a small simulated agent society across different environmental challenges (related to availability of food) and effects of OT modulation of social salience as a motivational incentive. Our results show that the effects of these modulatory mechanisms have different (positive or negative) adaptive value across different groups and under different environmental circumstance in a way that supports the context-dependent nature of OT, put forward by the interactionist approach to OT modulation in biological agents. In terms of simulation models, this means that OT modulation of the mechanisms that we have described should be context-dependent in order to maximise viability of our socially adaptive agents, illustrating the relevance of social allostasis mechanisms.
topic embodied agents
embodied affect
embodied interaction
social allostasis
oxytocin
homeostasis
social salience
social adaptation
social simulation
url http://www.mdpi.com/2414-4088/2/4/67
work_keys_str_mv AT imrankhan modellingadaptationthroughsocialallostasismodulatingtheeffectsofsocialtouchwithoxytocininembodiedagents
AT lolacanamero modellingadaptationthroughsocialallostasismodulatingtheeffectsofsocialtouchwithoxytocininembodiedagents
_version_ 1716823956663566336