Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Box 3620, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2012 Nov;223(2):177-87. doi: 10.1007/s00221-012-3249-7. Epub 2012 Sep 11.
Much research has been done on positive self-evaluation and its relationship to mental health. However, little is known about its neural underpinnings. Imaging studies have suggested that the brain's default network is involved with self-related processing and that one portion of the default network, medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), is particularly involved with self-evaluation. Here, we used transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to causally demonstrate that this network, and particularly MPFC, is involved with self-evaluative processing. In a first experiment, 27 healthy volunteers judged whether adjectives, evenly divided between desirable and undesirable traits, described themselves or their best friends, and a robust self-enhancement bias effect was found. In a second experiment, single-pulse TMS was applied targeting three locations (MPFC and left and right parietal cortex) in a different group of healthy volunteers while they performed the adjective task. In each trial, TMS was applied at one of five different times relative to onset of the adjective ranging from 0 to 480 ms. TMS affected self-enhancement bias in a site- and latency-specific manner: at MPFC, the self-enhancement bias actually reversed at 160 ms, with subjects favoring their best friend over themselves. TMS may thus be of use in investigating areas of mental illness in which self-evaluation is abnormal, potentially as a diagnostic tool. In addition, the present study, combined with our previous reports (Lou et al., Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101(17):6827-6832, 2004, Exp Brain Res 207:27-38, 2010), causally demonstrates two kinds of self-related processing within the default network, one centered in parietal cortex and concerned with retrieval of self-related associations, and the other MPFC-centered and involved in self-evaluative processing.
大量研究已经针对积极的自我评价及其与心理健康的关系展开。然而,对于其神经基础知之甚少。影像学研究表明,大脑的默认网络与自我相关的处理有关,而默认网络的一部分,内侧前额叶皮层(MPFC),特别涉及自我评价。在这里,我们使用经颅磁刺激(TMS)来因果地证明该网络,特别是 MPFC,参与自我评估处理。在第一个实验中,27 名健康志愿者判断形容词是否描述了自己或自己最好的朋友,形容词在令人向往和不令人向往的特征之间均匀分配,发现了强烈的自我增强偏见效应。在第二个实验中,在另一组健康志愿者执行形容词任务时,针对三个位置(MPFC 和左、右顶叶皮层)应用单脉冲 TMS。在每个试验中,TMS 在形容词出现的五个不同时间点中的一个相对于 0 到 480 毫秒的时间点应用。TMS 以位置和潜伏期特异性的方式影响自我增强偏见:在 MPFC 处,自我增强偏见实际上在 160 毫秒时反转,参与者更倾向于自己最好的朋友而不是自己。因此,TMS 可能可用于研究自我评估异常的精神疾病领域,潜在地用作诊断工具。此外,本研究与我们之前的报告(Lou 等人,Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101(17):6827-6832, 2004,Exp Brain Res 207:27-38, 2010)相结合,因果地证明了默认网络中两种与自我相关的处理,一种集中在顶叶皮层,与自我相关联想的检索有关,另一种以 MPFC 为中心,与自我评估处理有关。