Tate Andrew J, Fischer Hanno, Leigh Andrea E, Kendrick Keith M
Cognitive and Behavioural Neuroscience, Babraham Institute, Babraham, Cambridge CB2 4AT, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2006 Dec 29;361(1476):2155-72. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2006.1937.
Visual cues from faces provide important social information relating to individual identity, sexual attraction and emotional state. Behavioural and neurophysiological studies on both monkeys and sheep have shown that specialized skills and neural systems for processing these complex cues to guide behaviour have evolved in a number of mammals and are not present exclusively in humans. Indeed, there are remarkable similarities in the ways that faces are processed by the brain in humans and other mammalian species. While human studies with brain imaging and gross neurophysiological recording approaches have revealed global aspects of the face-processing network, they cannot investigate how information is encoded by specific neural networks. Single neuron electrophysiological recording approaches in both monkeys and sheep have, however, provided some insights into the neural encoding principles involved and, particularly, the presence of a remarkable degree of high-level encoding even at the level of a specific face. Recent developments that allow simultaneous recordings to be made from many hundreds of individual neurons are also beginning to reveal evidence for global aspects of a population-based code. This review will summarize what we have learned so far from these animal-based studies about the way the mammalian brain processes the faces and the emotions they can communicate, as well as associated capacities such as how identity and emotion cues are dissociated and how face imagery might be generated. It will also try to highlight what questions and advances in knowledge still challenge us in order to provide a complete understanding of just how brain networks perform this complex and important social recognition task.
来自面部的视觉线索提供了与个体身份、性吸引力和情绪状态相关的重要社会信息。对猴子和绵羊进行的行为及神经生理学研究表明,用于处理这些复杂线索以指导行为的专门技能和神经系统在许多哺乳动物中已经进化出来,并非人类所独有。事实上,人类和其他哺乳动物物种的大脑处理面部的方式存在显著相似之处。虽然利用脑成像和大体神经生理学记录方法对人类进行的研究揭示了面部处理网络的整体情况,但它们无法探究特定神经网络是如何编码信息的。然而,对猴子和绵羊采用的单神经元电生理记录方法,已经为所涉及的神经编码原理提供了一些见解,特别是即使在特定面部层面也存在显著程度的高级编码。最近能够同时从数百个单个神经元进行记录的技术发展,也开始揭示基于群体编码的整体情况的证据。这篇综述将总结我们目前从这些基于动物的研究中学到的关于哺乳动物大脑处理面部及其所传达的情感的方式,以及诸如身份和情感线索如何分离以及面部意象可能如何产生等相关能力。它还将试图突出知识方面仍在挑战我们的问题和进展,以便全面理解大脑网络是如何执行这项复杂而重要的社会识别任务的。