NIMH K99 Postdoctoral Fellow · Yale University
Weikang (Wilbur) Shi
I study how the brain computes strategic social decisions, with a focus on prosocial behavior in freely moving animals. My work integrates naturalistic behavioral paradigms, large-scale neural recordings, and computational modeling to link social strategies to their underlying circuit mechanisms.
My PhD at Washington University in St. Louis with Dr. Camillo Padoa-Schioppa used microstimulation and electrophysiology to establish causal links between orbitofrontal cortex activity and economic choice. My postdoc at Yale, supported by an NIH K99 Award, extended this to cooperative social behavior — developing naturalistic paradigms and wireless neural recording systems to study social decision-making in freely interacting dyads, in collaboration with Drs. Steve Chang, Anirvan Nandy, and Monika Jadi at the Wu Tsai Institute.
My long-term goal is a circuit-level model of how the cortico-striatal pathway generates prosocial decisions — with relevance to disorders of social cognition and to the development of more sophisticated social agents in AI.
New Haven, CT · weikang.w.shi@gmail.com Google Scholar GitHub X / Twitter Bluesky
I am seeking tenure-track faculty positions beginning Fall 2026.
Full curriculum vitae including talks and service.
Download CVFunding & Fellowships
-
2026
NIH Pathway to Independence Award (K99)
NIMH K99MH142687 · Cortical-Striatal Circuit Mechanisms Underlying Altruistic Decisions
-
2025
BSTP Postdoctoral Fellowship (T32)
T32MH014276 · Yale University · Two-Year Fellowship
-
2022
Wu Tsai Institute Postdoctoral Fellowship
Yale University · Three-Year Fellowship
-
2017
Cognitive, Computational and Systems Neuroscience Predoctoral Fellowship
Washington University in St. Louis
Research Program
How does the brain compute strategic prosocial decisions? Addressing this requires a model system that is both cognitively sophisticated and naturally prosocial, an experimental approach that captures the full complexity of naturalistic social interactions, and computational models that formalize the underlying strategies and link them to neural mechanisms.
My planned research program will focus on the following directions:
Behavior
Naturalistic cooperative paradigms in freely moving dyads, drawing on game theory to systematically probe social strategies across a range of effort, reward, and social contexts, with markerless tracking to capture behavioral dynamics at high resolution.
Computation
Computational models to formalize the mechanisms underlying social decisions, including drift-diffusion models to capture social evidence accumulation, Bayesian models to characterize interaction dynamics, and reinforcement learning to understand how strategies are learned and updated over time.
Circuit
High-density wireless recordings across prefrontal and striatal areas, analyzed with population-level methods to identify the neural substrates of prosocial choice, and synthesized through recurrent neural network models developed in collaboration with computational neuroscientists.
Long-term vision
Expanding from dyadic interactions to group social dynamics, and from correlation to causation through real-time circuit manipulation, building toward a comprehensive model of the social brain with relevance to neuropsychiatric disorders of social cognition.
Publications
Peer-Reviewed · Selected
-
Canonical decision computations underlie behavioral and neural signatures of cooperation in primates
Neuron (in press 2026) · bioRxiv 2025.10.22.683999In Press
-
Diverse and flexible strategies enable successful cooperation in marmoset dyads
Current Biology, 35.18 (2025)
-
Development of an apparatus for automated pulling to study cooperative behaviors
eLife, 13 (2024): RP97088
-
The orbitofrontal cortex: a goal-directed cognitive map framework for social and non-social behaviors
Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, 107793 (2023)
-
Orbitofrontal cortex contributes to the comparison of values underlying economic choices
Nature Communications, 13.4405 (2022)
-
Neuronal Origins of Reduced Accuracy and Biases in Economic Choices Under Sequential Offers
eLife, 11 (2022): e75910
-
Economic Choices with Simultaneous or Sequential Offers Rely on the Same Neural Circuit
Journal of Neuroscience, 42.1 (2022): 33–43
-
Values Encoded in Orbitofrontal Cortex Are Causally Related to Economic Choices
Nature, 588 (2020): 450–453
Book Chapters
-
Comparative game theory: Bringing ethology back into decision neuroscience
In: Smith, Fareri & Lockwood, eds., Neuroeconomics: Core Topics and Current Directions (2026) · Link
-
The role of orbitofrontal cortex in economic choice behavior
In: Grafman, ed., Encyclopedia of the Human Brain, Second Edition (2023) · Link
Selected Talks
-
2026
InvitedEffort Costs and Social Information Shape Cooperative Decisions in Marmosets
Marmoset Bioscience Symposium · Young Investigator Award Talk
-
2026
InvitedBehavioral and Neural Mechanisms of Cooperation in Freely Moving Marmosets
Princeton Neuroscience Institute Symposium · Princeton University
-
2025
InvitedNeural Dynamics of Social Evidence Accumulation in Cooperative Interactions
Wu Tsai Institute Seminar · Yale University
-
2025
Neural Dynamics of Social Evidence Accumulation in Cooperative Interactions
Society for Neuroeconomics · Boston, MA
-
2024
Exploring Behavioral and Neural Dynamics in Cooperative Interactions Among Marmoset Dyads
Society for Social Neuroscience · Tsukuba, Japan
-
2023
InvitedExploring Behavioral Dynamics in Cooperative Interactions Among Marmoset Dyads
Wu Tsai Institute Seminar · Yale University
-
2022
InvitedEconomic Choices with Simultaneous or Sequential Offers Rely on the Same Neural Circuit
Moreno-Bote Lab Journal Club · Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
-
2021
InvitedValues Encoded in Orbitofrontal Cortex Are Causally Related to Economic Choices
Yale Neuroeconomics Forum · Yale University
Selected Awards
-
2026
Young Investigator Award
Marmoset Bioscience Symposium
-
2025
Best Poster Award
Larry J. Young Memorial Research Symposium
-
2023
Best Poster Award
Society for Social Neuroscience
-
2022
Best Dissertation Award
Society for Neuroeconomics