Yale Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, USA.
Neuroimage. 2013 Dec;83:751-60. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.07.040. Epub 2013 Jul 20.
Disorders related to social functioning including autism and schizophrenia differ drastically in incidence and severity between males and females. Little is known about the neural systems underlying these sex-linked differences in risk and resiliency. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and a task involving the visual perception of point-light displays of coherent and scrambled biological motion, we discovered sex differences in the development of neural systems for basic social perception. In adults, we identified enhanced activity during coherent biological motion perception in females relative to males in a network of brain regions previously implicated in social perception including amygdala, medial temporal gyrus, and temporal pole. These sex differences were less pronounced in our sample of school-age youth. We hypothesize that the robust neural circuitry supporting social perception in females, which diverges from males beginning in childhood, may underlie sex differences in disorders related to social processing.
与社交功能相关的障碍,包括自闭症和精神分裂症,在男性和女性中的发病率和严重程度有很大差异。对于这些与性别相关的风险和适应能力差异的神经基础知之甚少。使用功能磁共振成像和一项涉及视觉感知连贯和打乱的生物运动的点光显示的任务,我们发现了神经系统在基本社交感知方面的性别差异。在成年人中,我们在一个包括杏仁核、内侧颞叶和颞极的先前与社会感知有关的大脑区域网络中,发现女性在感知连贯的生物运动时的活动增强,而男性则没有。在我们的学龄青少年样本中,这些性别差异不太明显。我们假设,支持女性社交感知的强大神经回路,从儿童期开始与男性不同,可能是与社交处理相关的障碍的性别差异的基础。