Schultz Johannes, Friston Karl J, O'Doherty John, Wolpert Daniel M, Frith Chris D
Wellcome Department of Imaging Neuroscience, 12 Queen Square, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom.
Neuron. 2005 Feb 17;45(4):625-35. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2004.12.052.
An essential, evolutionarily stable feature of brain function is the detection of animate entities, and one of the main cues to identify them is their movement. We developed a model of a simple interaction between two objects, in which an increase of the correlation between their movements varied the amount of interactivity and animacy observers attributed to them. Functional magnetic resonance imaging revealed that activation in the posterior superior temporal sulcus and gyrus (pSTS/pSTG) increased in relation to the degree of correlated motion between the two objects. This activation increase was not different when subjects performed an explicit or implicit task while observing these interacting objects. These data suggest that the pSTS and pSTG play a role in the automatic identification of animate entities, by responding directly to an objective movement characteristic inducing the percept of animacy, such as the amount of interactivity between two moving objects.
大脑功能的一个基本且在进化上稳定的特征是对有生命实体的检测,而识别它们的主要线索之一是其运动。我们开发了一个两个物体之间简单相互作用的模型,其中它们运动之间相关性的增加改变了观察者赋予它们的相互作用程度和生命感。功能磁共振成像显示,后颞上沟和颞上回(pSTS/pSTG)的激活随着两个物体之间相关运动的程度而增加。当受试者在观察这些相互作用的物体时执行明确或隐含任务时,这种激活增加并无差异。这些数据表明,pSTS和pSTG通过直接响应诱导生命感感知的客观运动特征(如两个移动物体之间的相互作用程度),在有生命实体的自动识别中发挥作用。