Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, Institute of Neurology, University College London, London WC1N 3BG, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2010 Aug 11;30(32):10744-51. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5895-09.2010.
Humans have the arguably unique ability to understand the mental representations of others. For success in both competitive and cooperative interactions, however, this ability must be extended to include representations of others' belief about our intentions, their model about our belief about their intentions, and so on. We developed a "stag hunt" game in which human subjects interacted with a computerized agent using different degrees of sophistication (recursive inferences) and applied an ecologically valid computational model of dynamic belief inference. We show that rostral medial prefrontal (paracingulate) cortex, a brain region consistently identified in psychological tasks requiring mentalizing, has a specific role in encoding the uncertainty of inference about the other's strategy. In contrast, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex encodes the depth of recursion of the strategy being used, an index of executive sophistication. These findings reveal putative computational representations within prefrontal cortex regions, supporting the maintenance of cooperation in complex social decision making.
人类具有一种可以理解他人心理表象的独特能力。然而,为了在竞争和合作的互动中取得成功,这种能力必须延伸到包括他人对我们意图的信念表象、他们对我们对他们意图的信念的模型等等。我们开发了一个“ stag hunt ”游戏,人类参与者与一个计算机化的代理进行交互,使用不同程度的复杂性(递归推理),并应用了一个生态有效的动态信念推理的计算模型。我们表明,大脑中负责心理理论的额内侧前额叶(扣带回旁回)在编码对他人策略的推理不确定性方面具有特定的作用。相比之下,背外侧前额叶则编码了所使用策略的递归深度,这是执行复杂性的指标。这些发现揭示了前额叶皮层区域内的假设计算表示,支持在复杂的社会决策中维持合作。