4D Brain Electrodynamics Laboratory, Department of Psychology, UCSB Brain Imaging Center, Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, USA.
PLoS One. 2010 Aug 13;5(8):e12160. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0012160.
When we observe an individual performing a motor act (e.g. grasping a cup) we get two types of information on the basis of how the motor act is done and the context: what the agent is doing (i.e. grasping) and the intention underlying it (i.e. grasping for drinking). Here we examined the temporal dynamics of the brain activations that follow the observation of a motor act and underlie the observer's capacity to understand what the agent is doing and why.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Volunteers were presented with two-frame video-clips. The first frame (T0) showed an object with or without context; the second frame (T1) showed a hand interacting with the object. The volunteers were instructed to understand the intention of the observed actions while their brain activity was recorded with a high-density 128-channel EEG system. Visual event-related potentials (VEPs) were recorded time-locked with the frame showing the hand-object interaction (T1). The data were analyzed by using electrical neuroimaging, which combines a cluster analysis performed on the group-averaged VEPs with the localization of the cortical sources that give rise to different spatio-temporal states of the global electrical field. Electrical neuroimaging results revealed four major steps: 1) bilateral posterior cortical activations; 2) a strong activation of the left posterior temporal and inferior parietal cortices with almost a complete disappearance of activations in the right hemisphere; 3) a significant increase of the activations of the right temporo-parietal region with simultaneously co-active left hemispheric sources, and 4) a significant global decrease of cortical activity accompanied by the appearance of activation of the orbito-frontal cortex.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We conclude that the early striking left hemisphere involvement is due to the activation of a lateralized action-observation/action execution network. The activation of this lateralized network mediates the understanding of the goal of object-directed motor acts (mirror mechanism). The successive right hemisphere activation indicates that this hemisphere plays an important role in understanding the intention of others.
当我们观察个体执行一个动作(例如,抓杯子)时,我们可以根据动作的方式和情境获得两种信息:执行者正在做什么(即抓握)和其背后的意图(即为了喝水而抓握)。在这里,我们检查了观察动作后大脑激活的时间动态,这是观察者理解执行者在做什么和为什么这样做的基础。
方法/主要发现:志愿者观看了两帧视频片段。第一帧(T0)显示一个带有或不带有背景的物体;第二帧(T1)显示一只手与物体交互。志愿者被指示理解观察到的动作的意图,同时使用高密度的 128 通道 EEG 系统记录他们的大脑活动。视觉事件相关电位(VEPs)与显示手-物相互作用的帧(T1)时间锁定记录。通过使用电神经影像学分析数据,该方法将对群组平均 VEPs 进行的聚类分析与产生全局电场不同时空状态的皮质源的定位相结合。电神经影像学结果揭示了四个主要步骤:1)双侧后皮质激活;2)左侧后颞叶和下顶叶的强烈激活,右侧半球的激活几乎完全消失;3)右侧颞顶区域的激活显著增加,同时伴有左侧半球源的共同激活;4)皮质活动的显著全局减少,伴随着眶额皮质的激活。
结论/意义:我们得出结论,早期明显的左侧半球参与归因于一个偏侧化的动作观察/动作执行网络的激活。这个偏侧化网络的激活介导了对目标导向运动动作的目的的理解(镜像机制)。随后右侧半球的激活表明该半球在理解他人意图方面发挥了重要作用。