Ishida Hiroaki, Suzuki Keisuke, Grandi Laura Clara
Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia (IIT), Brain Center for Social and Motor Cognition (BCSMC), Parma, Italy; Frontal Lobe Function Project, Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science, Tokyo, Japan.
Sackler Center for Consciousness Science, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK; School of Informatics and Engineering, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK.
Neuropsychologia. 2015 Apr;70:442-54. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2014.10.020. Epub 2014 Oct 24.
The discovery of mirror neurons in the ventral premotor cortex (area F5) and inferior parietal cortex (area PFG) in the macaque monkey brain has provided the physiological evidence for direct matching of the intrinsic motor representations of the self and the visual image of the actions of others. The existence of mirror neurons implies that the brain has mechanisms reflecting shared self and other action representations. This may further imply that the neural basis self-body representations may also incorporate components that are shared with other-body representations. It is likely that such a mechanism is also involved in predicting other's touch sensations and emotions. However, the neural basis of shared body representations has remained unclear. Here, we propose a neural basis of body representation of the self and of others in both human and non-human primates. We review a series of behavioral and physiological findings which together paint a picture that the systems underlying such shared representations require integration of conscious exteroception and interoception subserved by a cortical sensory-motor network involving parieto-inner perisylvian circuits (the ventral intraparietal area [VIP]/inferior parietal area [PFG]-secondary somatosensory cortex [SII]/posterior insular cortex [pIC]/anterior insular cortex [aIC]). Based on these findings, we propose a computational mechanism of the shared body representation in the predictive coding (PC) framework. Our mechanism proposes that processes emerging from generative models embedded in these specific neuronal circuits play a pivotal role in distinguishing a self-specific body representation from a shared one. The model successfully accounts for normal and abnormal shared body phenomena such as mirror-touch synesthesia and somatoparaphrenia. In addition, it generates a set of testable experimental predictions.
猕猴大脑腹侧运动前区(F5区)和顶下小叶(PFG区)中镜像神经元的发现,为自我内在运动表征与他人动作视觉形象的直接匹配提供了生理学证据。镜像神经元的存在意味着大脑具有反映自我与他人动作表征共享的机制。这可能进一步意味着,神经基础的自我身体表征也可能包含与他人身体表征共享的成分。这样的机制很可能也参与预测他人的触觉感受和情绪。然而,共享身体表征的神经基础仍不清楚。在此,我们提出了人类和非人类灵长类动物自我与他人身体表征的神经基础。我们回顾了一系列行为学和生理学研究结果,这些结果共同描绘出一幅图景:此类共享表征背后的系统需要由涉及顶叶-岛周回路(腹侧顶内区[VIP]/顶下小叶[PFG]-次级体感皮层[SII]/后岛叶皮层[pIC]/前岛叶皮层[aIC])的皮层感觉运动网络所支持的有意识的外感受和内感受的整合。基于这些发现,我们在预测编码(PC)框架下提出了共享身体表征的计算机制。我们的机制提出,嵌入这些特定神经回路中的生成模型所产生的过程,在区分自我特定身体表征和共享身体表征方面起着关键作用。该模型成功解释了正常和异常的共享身体现象,如镜像触觉联觉和躯体失认症。此外,它还产生了一系列可测试的实验预测。