Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy, and Psychosomatics, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University, Aachen, Germany ; Central Service Facility "Functional Imaging" at the Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University, Aachen, Germany ; Jülich Aachen Research Alliance - Translational Brain Medicine, Jülich/Aachen, Germany ; Department of Neurology, Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule Aachen University, Aachen, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013 Aug 21;8(8):e69886. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069886. eCollection 2013.
Imitation of facial expressions engages the putative human mirror neuron system as well as the insula and the amygdala as part of the limbic system. The specific function of the latter two regions during emotional actions is still under debate. The current study investigated brain responses during imitation of positive in comparison to non-emotional facial expressions. Differences in brain activation of the amygdala and insula were additionally examined during observation and execution of facial expressions. Participants imitated, executed and observed happy and non-emotional facial expressions, as well as neutral faces. During imitation, higher right hemispheric activation emerged in the happy compared to the non-emotional condition in the right anterior insula and the right amygdala, in addition to the pre-supplementary motor area, middle temporal gyrus and the inferior frontal gyrus. Region-of-interest analyses revealed that the right insula was more strongly recruited by (i) imitation and execution than by observation of facial expressions, that (ii) the insula was significantly stronger activated by happy than by non-emotional facial expressions during observation and imitation and that (iii) the activation differences in the right amygdala between happy and non-emotional facial expressions were increased during imitation and execution, in comparison to sole observation. We suggest that the insula and the amygdala contribute specifically to the happy emotional connotation of the facial expressions depending on the task. The pattern of the insula activity might reflect increased bodily awareness during active execution compared to passive observation and during visual processing of the happy compared to non-emotional facial expressions. The activation specific for the happy facial expression of the amygdala during motor tasks, but not in the observation condition, might reflect increased autonomic activity or feedback from facial muscles to the amygdala.
模仿面部表情会激活假定的人类镜像神经元系统以及脑岛和杏仁核,这些区域属于边缘系统的一部分。这两个区域在情绪行为中的具体功能仍存在争议。本研究调查了在模仿积极表情与非情绪表情时的大脑反应。此外,还在观察和执行面部表情时检查了杏仁核和脑岛的大脑激活差异。参与者模仿、执行和观察了快乐和非情绪的面部表情以及中性面部表情。在模仿过程中,与非情绪表情相比,参与者在右侧前脑岛和右侧杏仁核以及辅助运动区、颞中回和额下回中表现出更高的右半球激活。感兴趣区域分析显示,与观察相比,(i)模仿和执行对面部表情的右侧脑岛招募更强,(ii)在观察和模仿过程中,右侧脑岛对快乐表情的激活强度显著高于非情绪表情,(iii)与仅观察相比,在模仿和执行过程中,右侧杏仁核的激活差异在快乐和非情绪表情之间增加。我们认为,脑岛和杏仁核根据任务特异性地对面部表情的快乐情绪内涵做出贡献。脑岛活动的模式可能反映了在主动执行期间相比被动观察以及在视觉处理快乐表情相比非情绪表情时,身体意识增强。在运动任务中,而不是在观察条件下,杏仁核对快乐面部表情的特异性激活可能反映了自主活动的增加或来自面部肌肉的反馈到杏仁核。