The default network and social cognition: new insights and future directions

ElsevierVolume 66, December 2025, 101585Current Opinion in Behavioral SciencesAuthor links open overlay panel, Highlights•

Social guiding and consolidation at rest by the default network aids social life

Social guiding at rest shapes subsequent social cognition

Social consolidation at rest commits social information to memory

Future research will add breadth and depth to our understanding of these processes

The default network is known to engage more strongly ‘by default’ during rest compared to many cognitive tasks. The network is also reliably associated with social cognition, suggesting some forms of social cognition may occur ‘by default’ during rest. The goal of this opinion piece is to review accumulating evidence suggesting the default network performs two social cognitive processes during rest: social guiding and social consolidation. Social guiding refers to the observation that the immediate brain state participants enter in the default network as soon as they rest shapes their immediately following social cognition and behavior. Social consolidation refers to the observation that after participants are exposed to new social information, the default network commits the social information to memory during rest. After reviewing findings in support of social guiding and social consolidation, we offer directions for new research on these topics.

© 2025 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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