Zacks Jeffrey M
Department of Psychology, Washington University in Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2008 Jan;20(1):1-19. doi: 10.1162/jocn.2008.20013.
Abstract Mental rotation is a hypothesized imagery process that has inspired controversy regarding the substrate of human spatial reasoning. Two central questions about mental rotation remain: Does mental rotation depend on analog spatial representations, and does mental rotation depend on motor simulation? A review and meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies help answer these questions. Mental rotation is accompanied by increased activity in the intraparietal sulcus and adjacent regions. These areas contain spatially mapped representations, and activity in these areas is modulated by parametric manipulations of mental rotation tasks, supporting the view that mental rotation depends on analog representations. Mental rotation also is accompanied by activity in the medial superior precentral cortex, particularly under conditions that favor motor simulation, supporting the view that mental rotation depends on motor simulation in some situations. The relationship between mental rotation and motor simulation can be understood in terms of how these two processes update spatial reference frames.
摘要 心理旋转是一种假设的意象过程,它引发了关于人类空间推理基础的争议。关于心理旋转仍存在两个核心问题:心理旋转是否依赖于模拟空间表征,以及心理旋转是否依赖于运动模拟?对神经影像学研究的综述和荟萃分析有助于回答这些问题。心理旋转伴随着顶内沟及相邻区域活动的增加。这些区域包含空间映射表征,并且这些区域的活动受到心理旋转任务参数操作的调节,支持了心理旋转依赖于模拟表征的观点。心理旋转还伴随着中央前回内侧上部皮质的活动,特别是在有利于运动模拟的条件下,支持了心理旋转在某些情况下依赖于运动模拟的观点。心理旋转与运动模拟之间的关系可以从这两个过程如何更新空间参照系的角度来理解。