Lopez C, Falconer C J, Deroualle D, Mast F W
Laboratoire de neurosciences intégratives et adaptatives, UMR 7260, Centre national de la recherche scientifique, fédération de recherche 3C - case B, centre Saint-Charles, Aix-Marseille université, 3, place Victor-Hugo, 13331 Marseille cedex 03, France.
Department of Psychiatry and Applied Psychology, University of Nottingham, Triumph Road NG7 2TU, Nottingham, United Kingdom; Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College of London, Torrington Place WC1E 7HB, London, United Kingdom.
Neurophysiol Clin. 2015 Nov;45(4-5):241-54. doi: 10.1016/j.neucli.2015.09.001. Epub 2015 Oct 23.
The degree to which others in our environment influence sensorimotor processing has been a particular focus of cognitive neuroscience for the past two decades. This process of self-other resonance, or shared body representation, has only recently been extended to more global bodily processes such as self-location, self-motion perception, balance and perspective taking. In this review, we outline these previously overlooked areas of research to bridge the distinct field of social neuroscience with global self-perception, vestibular processing and postural control. Firstly, we outline research showing that the presence and movement of others can modulate two fundamental experiences of the self: self-location (the experience of where the self is located in space) and self-motion perception (the experience that oneself has moved or has been moved in space). Secondly, we outline recent research that has shown perturbations in balance control as a result of instability in others in our environment. Conversely to this, we also highlight studies in virtual reality demonstrating the potential benefits of the presence of others in our environment for those undergoing vestibular rehabilitation. Thirdly, we outline studies of first- and third-person perspective taking, which is the ability to have or take a visuo-spatial perspective within and out-with the confines of our own body. These studies demonstrate a contamination of perspective taking processes (i.e. automatic, implicit, third-person perspective taking) in the presence of others. This collection of research highlights the importance of social cues in the more global processing of the self and its accompanying sensory inputs, particularly vestibular signals. Future research will need to better determine the mechanisms of self-other resonance within these processes, including the role of individual differences in the susceptibility to the influence of another.
在过去二十年里,我们周围环境中的他人对感觉运动处理的影响程度一直是认知神经科学的一个特别关注点。这种自我与他人的共鸣过程,即共享身体表征,直到最近才扩展到更全面的身体过程,如自我定位、自我运动感知、平衡和换位思考。在这篇综述中,我们概述了这些之前被忽视的研究领域,以将社会神经科学这一独特领域与全球自我感知、前庭处理和姿势控制联系起来。首先,我们概述了一些研究,这些研究表明他人的存在和运动可以调节自我的两种基本体验:自我定位(自我在空间中所处位置的体验)和自我运动感知(自己在空间中移动或被移动的体验)。其次,我们概述了最近的研究,这些研究表明,由于我们周围环境中他人的不稳定,平衡控制会受到干扰。与此相反,我们还强调了虚拟现实中的研究,这些研究表明我们周围环境中他人的存在对那些正在进行前庭康复的人具有潜在益处。第三,我们概述了第一人称和第三人称视角采择的研究,即能够在我们自己身体的范围内外拥有或采取视觉空间视角的能力。这些研究表明,在他人在场的情况下,视角采择过程(即自动的、隐性的第三人称视角采择)会受到干扰。这一系列研究突出了社会线索在更全面的自我处理及其伴随的感觉输入(特别是前庭信号)中的重要性。未来的研究需要更好地确定这些过程中自我与他人共鸣的机制,包括个体差异在易受他人影响方面的作用。