Ohnishi Takashi, Moriguchi Yoshiya, Matsuda Hiroshi, Mori Takeyuki, Hirakata Makiko, Imabayashi Etsuko, Hirao Kentaro, Nemoto Kiyotaka, Kaga Makiko, Inagaki Masumi, Yamada Minoru, Uno Akira
Department of Radiology, National Center Hospital of Mental, Nervous and Muscular Disorders, National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry, 4-1-1 Ogawa Higashi, Kodaira City, Tokyo 187-8551, Japan.
Neuroreport. 2004 Jun 28;15(9):1483-7. doi: 10.1097/01.wnr.0000127464.17770.1f.
We performed fMRI measurements in normal children to clarify which cortical areas are commonly involved in the mirror system (MS) and mentalizing, which areas are specific for mentalizing, and whether children have the same neural networks for MS and mentalizing as adults. Normal children had the same neural networks for the MS and mentalizing as adults. Common activations were found in the superior temporal sulcus and the fusiform gyri, whereas mentalizing specific activation was found in the medial prefrontal, temporal pole and the inferior parietal cortices. We suggest that mentalizing might evolve from a capacity to detect the motion of agents and to infer intentions. Further, mentalizing might require self-perspectives.