Vaina L M, Solomon J, Chowdhury S, Sinha P, Belliveau J W
Boston University, Brain and Vision Research Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Engineering and Neurology, 44 Cummington Street, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2001 Sep 25;98(20):11656-61. doi: 10.1073/pnas.191374198. Epub 2001 Sep 11.
We used whole brain functional MRI to investigate the neural network specifically engaged in the recognition of "biological motion" defined by point-lights attached to the major joints and head of a human walker. To examine the specificity of brain regions responsive to biological motion, brain activations obtained during a "walker vs. non-walker" discrimination task were compared with those elicited by two other tasks: (i) non-rigid motion (NRM), involving the discrimination of overall motion direction in the same "point-lights" display, and (ii) face-gender discrimination, involving the discrimination of gender in briefly presented photographs of men and women. Brain activity specific to "biological motion" recognition arose in the lateral cerebellum and in a region in the lateral occipital cortex presumably corresponding to the area KO previously shown to be particularly sensitive to kinetic contours. Additional areas significantly activated during the biological motion recognition task involved both, dorsal and ventral extrastriate cortical regions. In the ventral regions both face-gender discrimination and biological motion recognition elicited activation in the lingual and fusiform gyri and in the Brodmann areas 22 and 38 in superior temporal sulcus (STS). Along the dorsal pathway, both biological motion recognition and non-rigid direction discrimination gave rise to strong responses in several known motion sensitive areas. These included Brodmann areas 19/37, the inferior (Brodmann Area 39), and superior parietal lobule (Brodmann Area 7). Thus, we conjecture that, whereas face (and form) stimuli activate primarily the ventral system and motion stimuli primarily the dorsal system, recognition of biological motion stimuli may activate both systems as well as their confluence in STS. This hypothesis is consistent with our findings in stroke patients, with unilateral brain lesions involving at least one of these areas, who, although correctly reporting the direction of the point-light walker, fail on the biological motion task.
我们使用全脑功能磁共振成像来研究专门参与识别“生物运动”的神经网络,这种生物运动由附着在人类步行者主要关节和头部的点光源定义。为了检验对生物运动有反应的脑区的特异性,将在“步行者与非步行者”辨别任务中获得的脑激活与另外两个任务引发的脑激活进行了比较:(i)非刚性运动(NRM),涉及在相同的“点光源”显示中辨别整体运动方向;(ii)面部性别辨别,涉及在男女的简短照片中辨别性别。特定于“生物运动”识别的脑活动出现在外侧小脑以及枕叶外侧皮质的一个区域,该区域大概对应于先前显示对动态轮廓特别敏感的KO区。在生物运动识别任务期间显著激活的其他区域包括背侧和腹侧纹外皮质区域。在腹侧区域,面部性别辨别和生物运动识别均在舌回和梭状回以及颞上沟(STS)的布罗德曼区22和38中引发激活。沿着背侧通路,生物运动识别和非刚性方向辨别在几个已知的运动敏感区域均引发强烈反应。这些区域包括布罗德曼区19/37、颞下回(布罗德曼区39)和顶上小叶(布罗德曼区7)。因此,我们推测,虽然面部(和形状)刺激主要激活腹侧系统,运动刺激主要激活背侧系统,但生物运动刺激的识别可能会激活这两个系统以及它们在颞上沟的汇合处。这一假设与我们在中风患者中的发现一致,这些患者的单侧脑损伤至少涉及这些区域中的一个,他们虽然能正确报告点光源步行者的方向,但在生物运动任务上失败了。