Tucciarelli Raffaele, Turella Luca, Oosterhof Nikolaas N, Weisz Nathan, Lingnau Angelika
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences.
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science, University of Trento, 38068 Rovereto, Italy, Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Dec 9;35(49):16034-45. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1422-15.2015.
Understanding other people's actions is a fundamental prerequisite for social interactions. Whether action understanding relies on simulating the actions of others in the observers' motor system or on the access to conceptual knowledge stored in nonmotor areas is strongly debated. It has been argued previously that areas that play a crucial role in action understanding should (1) distinguish between different actions, (2) generalize across the ways in which actions are performed (Dinstein et al., 2008; Oosterhof et al., 2013; Caramazza et al., 2014), and (3) have access to action information around the time of action recognition (Hauk et al., 2008). Whereas previous studies focused on the first two criteria, little is known about the dynamics underlying action understanding. We examined which human brain regions are able to distinguish between pointing and grasping, regardless of reach direction (left or right) and effector (left or right hand), using multivariate pattern analysis of magnetoencephalography data. We show that the lateral occipitotemporal cortex (LOTC) has the earliest access to abstract action representations, which coincides with the time point from which there was enough information to allow discriminating between the two actions. By contrast, precentral regions, though recruited early, have access to such abstract representations substantially later. Our results demonstrate that in contrast to the LOTC, the early recruitment of precentral regions does not contain the detailed information that is required to recognize an action. We discuss previous theoretical claims of motor theories and how they are incompatible with our data.
It is debated whether our ability to understand other people's actions relies on the simulation of actions in the observers' motor system, or is based on access to conceptual knowledge stored in nonmotor areas. Here, using magnetoencephalography in combination with machine learning, we examined where in the brain and at which point in time it is possible to distinguish between pointing and grasping actions regardless of the way in which they are performed (effector, reach direction). We show that, in contrast to the predictions of motor theories of action understanding, the lateral occipitotemporal cortex has access to abstract action representations substantially earlier than precentral regions.
理解他人的行为是社交互动的基本前提。行为理解是依赖于在观察者的运动系统中模拟他人的行为,还是依赖于获取存储在非运动区域的概念性知识,这一问题存在激烈争论。此前有人认为,在行为理解中起关键作用的区域应该(1)区分不同的行为,(2)对行为执行方式进行概括(丁斯坦等人,2008年;奥斯特霍夫等人,2013年;卡拉马扎等人,2014年),以及(3)在行为识别时能够获取行为信息(豪克等人,2008年)。尽管先前的研究侧重于前两个标准,但对于行为理解背后的动态过程知之甚少。我们使用脑磁图数据的多变量模式分析,研究了人类大脑的哪些区域能够区分指示和抓握,而不考虑伸手方向(左或右)和效应器(左手或右手)。我们发现,外侧枕颞叶皮层(LOTC)最早能够获取抽象的行为表征,这与有足够信息区分这两种行为的时间点相吻合。相比之下,中央前回区域虽然被较早激活,但要在 substantially 更晚的时候才能获取此类抽象表征。我们的结果表明,与外侧枕颞叶皮层不同,中央前回区域的早期激活并不包含识别行为所需的详细信息。我们讨论了先前运动理论的理论主张以及它们如何与我们的数据不兼容。
我们理解他人行为的能力是依赖于在观察者的运动系统中模拟行为,还是基于获取存储在非运动区域的概念性知识,这一问题存在争议。在这里,我们结合机器学习使用脑磁图,研究了大脑中何处以及何时能够区分指示和抓握行为,而不考虑它们的执行方式(效应器、伸手方向)。我们发现,如果与行为理解的运动理论预测相反,外侧枕颞叶皮层比中央前回区域更早能够获取抽象的行为表征。