a Yale Child Study Center, Yale University , New Haven , CT , USA.
Soc Neurosci. 2012;7(3):301-10. doi: 10.1080/17470919.2011.614003. Epub 2011 Sep 26.
Typical adult observers demonstrate enhanced behavioral sensitivity to human movement compared to animal movement. Yet, the neural underpinnings of this effect are unknown. We examined the tuning of brain mechanisms for the perception of biological motion to the social relevance of this category of motion by comparing neural response to human and non-human biological motion. In particular, we tested the hypothesis that the response of the right posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) varies according to the social relevance of the motion, responding most strongly to those biological motions with the greatest social relevance (human > dog). During a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) session, typical adults viewed veridical point-light displays of human, dog, and tractor motions created from motion capture data. A conjunction analysis identified regions of significant activation during biological motion perception relative to object motion. Within each of these regions, only one brain area, the right pSTS, revealed an enhanced response to human motion relative to dog motion. This finding demonstrates that the pSTS response is sensitive to the social relevance of a biological motion stimulus.
典型的成年观察者在行为上对人类运动的敏感性要高于对动物运动的敏感性。然而,这种效应的神经基础尚不清楚。我们通过比较对人类和非人类生物运动的神经反应,研究了大脑机制对生物运动感知的调节,以适应这一类运动的社会相关性。具体来说,我们测试了这样一个假设,即右后颞上沟(pSTS)的反应根据运动的社会相关性而变化,对具有最大社会相关性的运动(人类>狗)反应最强。在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)期间,典型的成年人观看了由运动捕捉数据创建的真实点光显示的人类、狗和拖拉机运动。一个结合分析确定了在生物运动感知相对于物体运动时显著激活的区域。在这些区域中的每一个中,只有一个大脑区域,即右 pSTS,显示出对人类运动的反应相对于狗运动的增强。这一发现表明,pSTS 的反应对生物运动刺激的社会相关性很敏感。