Jenkins Adrianna C, Macrae C Neil, Mitchell Jason P
Department of Psychology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Mar 18;105(11):4507-12. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0708785105. Epub 2008 Mar 17.
One useful strategy for inferring others' mental states (i.e., mentalizing) may be to use one's own thoughts, feelings, and desires as a proxy for those of other people. Such self-referential accounts of social cognition are supported by recent neuroimaging observations that a single brain region, ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vMPFC), is engaged both by tasks that require introspections about self and by tasks that require inferences about the minds of others perceived to be similar to self. To test whether people automatically refer to their own mental states when considering those of a similar other, we examined repetition-related suppression of vMPFC response during self-reflections that followed either an initial reflection about self or a judgment of another person. Consistent with the hypothesis that perceivers spontaneously engage in self-referential processing when mentalizing about particular individuals, vMPFC response was suppressed when self-reflections followed either an initial reflection about self or a judgment of a similar, but not a dissimilar, other. These results suggest that thinking about the mind of another person may rely importantly on reference to one's own mental characteristics.
一种推断他人心理状态(即心理化)的有效策略可能是将自己的思想、情感和欲望作为他人的替代品。这种社会认知的自我参照解释得到了最近神经影像学观察结果的支持,即一个单一的脑区——腹内侧前额叶皮层(vMPFC),在需要对自我进行内省的任务以及需要对被认为与自我相似的他人心理进行推断的任务中都会被激活。为了测试人们在考虑与自己相似的他人的心理状态时是否会自动参照自己的心理状态,我们在对自我的初始反思或对他人的判断之后的自我反思过程中,检查了vMPFC反应的重复相关抑制。与感知者在对特定个体进行心理化时会自发地进行自我参照处理的假设一致,当自我反思在对自我的初始反思或对相似但非不相似的他人的判断之后进行时,vMPFC反应会受到抑制。这些结果表明,思考他人的心理可能很大程度上依赖于参照自己的心理特征。