Department of Psychology, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520-8205, USA.
Cereb Cortex. 2012 May;22(5):1098-106. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhr180. Epub 2011 Jul 18.
The conditions under which we identify entities as animate agents and the neural mechanisms supporting this ability are central questions in social neuroscience. Prior studies have focused upon 2 perceptual cues for signaling animacy: 1) surface features representing body forms such as faces, torsos, and limbs and 2) motion cues associated with biological forms. Here, we consider a third cue--the goal-directedness of an action. Regions in the social brain network, such as the right posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) and fusiform face area (FFA), are activated by human-like motion and body form perceptual cues signaling animacy. Here, we investigate whether these same brain regions are activated by goal-directed motion even when performed by entities that lack human-like perceptual cues. We observed an interaction effect whereby the presence of either human-like perceptual cues or goal-directed actions was sufficient to activate the right pSTS and FFA. Only stimuli that lacked human-like perceptual cues and goal-directed actions failed to activate the pSTS and FFA at the same level.
我们将实体识别为有生命的能动体的条件以及支持这种能力的神经机制是社会神经科学的核心问题。先前的研究集中在表示生物活性的两个感知线索上:1)代表身体形态的表面特征,例如脸、躯干和四肢,2)与生物形态相关的运动线索。在这里,我们考虑第三个线索——动作的目标导向性。社会大脑网络中的区域,如右后颞上沟(pSTS)和梭状回面孔区(FFA),会被表示生物活性的类人运动和身体形态感知线索激活。在这里,我们研究了即使在缺乏类人感知线索的实体执行时,这些相同的大脑区域是否会被目标导向的运动激活。我们观察到一种相互作用效应,即存在类人感知线索或目标导向动作足以激活右 pSTS 和 FFA。只有缺乏类人感知线索和目标导向动作的刺激不能以相同的水平激活 pSTS 和 FFA。