Madipakkam Apoorva Rajiv, Rothkirch Marcus, Guggenmos Matthias, Heinz Andreas, Sterzer Philipp
Department of Psychiatry, International Graduate Program Medical Neurosciences, and Berlin Center for Advanced Neuroimaging, Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany, and
Department of Psychiatry, Berlin Center for Advanced Neuroimaging, Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin, 10117 Berlin, Germany, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Sep 30;35(39):13287-99. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0815-15.2015.
Gaze direction and especially direct gaze is a powerful nonverbal cue that plays an important role in social interactions. Here we studied the neural mechanisms underlying the privileged access of direct gaze to visual awareness. We performed functional magnetic resonance imaging in healthy human volunteers who were exposed to faces with direct or averted gaze under continuous flash suppression, thereby manipulating their awareness of the faces. A gaze processing network comprising fusiform face area (FFA), superior temporal sulcus, amygdala, and intraparietal sulcus showed overall reduced neural responses when participants reported to be unaware of the faces. Interestingly, direct gaze elicited greater responses than averted gaze when participants were aware of the faces, but smaller responses when they were unaware. Additional between-subject correlation and single-trial analyses indicated that this pattern of results was due to a modulation of the relationship between neural responses and awareness by gaze direction: with increasing neural activation in the FFA, direct-gaze faces entered awareness more readily than averted-gaze faces. These findings suggest that for direct gaze, lower levels of neural activity are sufficient to give rise to awareness than for averted gaze, thus providing a neural basis for privileged access of direct gaze to awareness. Significance statement: Another person's eye gaze directed at oneself is a powerful social signal acting as a catalyst for further communication. Here, we studied the neural mechanisms underlying the prioritized access of direct gaze to visual awareness in healthy human volunteers and show that with increasing neural activation, direct-gaze faces enter awareness more readily than averted-gaze faces. This suggests that for a socially highly relevant cue like direct gaze, lower levels of neural activity are sufficient to give rise to awareness compared with averted gaze, possibly because the human brain is attuned to the efficient neural processing of direct gaze due to the biological importance of eye contact for social interactions.
注视方向,尤其是直接注视,是一种强大的非语言线索,在社交互动中起着重要作用。在此,我们研究了直接注视优先进入视觉意识背后的神经机制。我们对健康人类志愿者进行了功能磁共振成像研究,这些志愿者在持续闪光抑制下观看直视或回避注视的面孔,从而操控他们对面孔的意识。一个由梭状面孔区(FFA)、颞上沟、杏仁核和顶内沟组成的注视处理网络,在参与者报告未意识到面孔时,整体神经反应降低。有趣的是,当参与者意识到面孔时,直接注视比回避注视引发的反应更大,但当他们未意识到时,反应更小。额外的个体间相关性分析和单试次分析表明,这种结果模式是由于注视方向对神经反应与意识之间关系的调节所致:随着FFA中神经激活的增加,直视面孔比回避注视面孔更容易进入意识。这些发现表明,对于直接注视而言,产生意识所需的神经活动水平低于回避注视,从而为直接注视优先进入意识提供了神经基础。意义声明:他人直接看向自己的目光是一种强大的社交信号,是进一步交流的催化剂。在此,我们研究了健康人类志愿者中直接注视优先进入视觉意识背后的神经机制,并表明随着神经激活的增加,直视面孔比回避注视面孔更容易进入意识。这表明,对于像直接注视这样具有高度社会相关性的线索,与回避注视相比,产生意识所需的神经活动水平更低,这可能是因为由于眼神接触在社交互动中的生物学重要性,人类大脑已适应了对直接注视的高效神经处理。