Tamura Miyuki, Moriguchi Yoshiya, Higuchi Shigekazu, Hida Akiko, Enomoto Minori, Umezawa Jun, Mishima Kazuo
Faculty of Human Arts and Sciences, University of Human Arts and Sciences, Saitama, Japan.
Neurol Res. 2013 Jan;35(1):22-8. doi: 10.1179/1743132812Y.0000000109.
The results of neuroimaging studies have indicated that viewing emotional stimuli can lead to activity increases in brain regions associated with processing actions. We hypothesized that observation of actions involving the potential for harm (i.e., risk-taking actions) would activate emotion- and pain-related processing.
We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine the changes in neural activity during the observation of safe and risk-taking actions in 34 healthy participants (14 females, 20 males; mean age: 23·4±3·7 years).
Observation of risk-taking actions elicited significantly stronger neural activation in the inferior frontal gyrus, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, superior frontal gyrus/frontal pole, inferior parietal lobule, middle temporal gyrus, middle occipital gyrus, lingual gyrus, cuneus (including the calcarine sulcus), insula, and amygdala, than observation of safe actions. Interestingly, we observed significant activation of affect-related brain areas (ventromedial prefrontal cortex, amygdala, and insula), thought to be implicated in various aspects of emotion regulation during the observation of risk-taking actions. No brain regions exhibited greater activation during observation of safe actions than during observation of risk-taking actions associated with risk.
Our results reveal that the risk-related content of the observed actions in the video clips elicited activation of a network of visual input and processing regions, including the action observation network, that appears to encode the meanings of observed actions as well as the reflective or retrospective monitoring of their outcomes. These findings suggest that risk-taking situations may increase cognitive load on the entire action perception system, and may command more attention.
神经影像学研究结果表明,观看情绪刺激会导致与动作处理相关的脑区活动增加。我们假设观察涉及潜在伤害的动作(即冒险动作)会激活与情绪和疼痛相关的处理过程。
我们使用功能磁共振成像来检查34名健康参与者(14名女性,20名男性;平均年龄:23.4±3.7岁)在观察安全和冒险动作期间神经活动的变化。
与观察安全动作相比,观察冒险动作在额下回、腹内侧前额叶皮层、额上回/额极、顶下小叶、颞中回、枕中回、舌回、楔叶(包括距状沟)、岛叶和杏仁核中引发了明显更强的神经激活。有趣的是,我们在观察冒险动作期间观察到与情感相关的脑区(腹内侧前额叶皮层、杏仁核和岛叶)有明显激活,这些脑区被认为与情绪调节的各个方面有关。在观察安全动作期间,没有脑区比观察与风险相关的冒险动作期间表现出更强的激活。
我们的结果表明,视频片段中观察到的动作的风险相关内容引发了包括动作观察网络在内的视觉输入和处理区域网络的激活,该网络似乎对观察到的动作的含义以及对其结果的反思或回顾性监测进行编码。这些发现表明,冒险情境可能会增加整个动作感知系统的认知负荷,并可能需要更多关注。