Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.06.137976v1?rss=1 Authors: Westbrook, A., Ghosh, A., van den Bosch, R., Cools, R. Abstract: Striatal dopamine has been implicated in social behavior across humans, rodents, and non-human primates in artificial laboratory settings with highly-practiced tasks and fixed reward contingencies. Whether striatal dopamine drives naturalistic, spontaneous social behavior remains unclear. Here, we leverage day-to-day logs of unconstrained smartphone behavior and establish a novel link between smartphone social activity and individual differences in striatal dopamine synthesis capacity using [18F]-DOPA PET in (N=22) healthy adult humans. We find a strong relationship such that a higher proportion of social app interactions correlates with lower dopamine synthesis capacity in the bi-lateral putamen. Permutation tests and penalized regressions provide evidence that this link between dopamine synthesis capacity and social versus non-social smartphone taps is specific. These observations provide a key empirical grounding for current speculations about dopamine's role in digital social behavior. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info