Wagner Dylan D, Kelley William M, Haxby James V, Heatherton Todd F
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, and
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755.
J Neurosci. 2016 Jun 29;36(26):6917-25. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4220-15.2016.
Humans display a strong tendency to make spontaneous inferences concerning the thoughts and intentions of others. Although this ability relies upon the concerted effort of multiple brain regions, the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC) is most closely associated with the ability to reason about other people's mental states and form impressions of their character. Here, we investigated this region's putative social category preference using fMRI as 34 participants engaged in uninstructed viewing of a complex naturalistic stimulus. Using a data-driven "reverse correlation" approach, we characterize the DMPFC's stimulus response profile from ongoing neural responses to a dynamic movie stimulus. Results of this analysis demonstrate that the DMPFC's response profile is dominated by the presence of scenes involving social interactions between characters. Subsequent content analysis of video clips created from this response profile confirmed this finding. In contrast, regions of the inferotemporal and parietal cortex were selectively tuned to faces and actions, both features that often covary with social interaction but may be difficult to disentangle using standard event-related approaches. Together, these findings suggest that the DMPFC is finely tuned for processing social interaction above other categories and that this preference is maintained during unrestricted viewing of complex natural stimuli such as movies.
Recently, studies have brought into question whether the dorsal medial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC), a region long associated with social cognition, is specialized for the processing of social information. We examine the response profile of this region during natural viewing of a reasonably naturalistic stimulus (i.e., a Hollywood movie) using a data-driven reverse correlation technique. Our findings demonstrate that, during natural viewing, the DMPFC is strongly tuned to the social features of the stimulus above other categories. Moreover, this response differs from other areas with previously well characterized response profiles such as the lateral and medial fusiform gyrus. These findings suggest that this region's dominant function in everyday situations is to support reasoning about the thoughts and intentions of conspecifics.
人类表现出一种强烈的自发推断他人思想和意图的倾向。尽管这种能力依赖于多个脑区的协同作用,但背内侧前额叶皮层(DMPFC)与推断他人心理状态并形成对其性格印象的能力联系最为紧密。在此,我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对该脑区假定的社会类别偏好进行了研究,34名参与者在无指导的情况下观看了一个复杂的自然主义刺激物。使用数据驱动的“反向相关”方法,我们从对动态电影刺激的持续神经反应中描绘出DMPFC的刺激反应特征。该分析结果表明,DMPFC的反应特征主要由涉及角色间社会互动的场景主导。根据这一反应特征创建的视频片段的后续内容分析证实了这一发现。相比之下,颞下皮层和顶叶皮层区域则分别选择性地对面孔和动作进行了调整,这两个特征通常与社会互动相关,但使用标准的事件相关方法可能难以区分。总之,这些发现表明,DMPFC针对处理社会互动进行了精细调整,优于其他类别,并且在无限制观看电影等复杂自然刺激时这种偏好得以保持。
最近,研究对长期以来与社会认知相关的背内侧前额叶皮层(DMPFC)是否专门用于处理社会信息提出了质疑。我们使用数据驱动的反向相关技术,在自然观看合理自然主义刺激物(即好莱坞电影)期间检查了该区域的反应特征。我们的研究结果表明,在自然观看期间,DMPFC对刺激物的社会特征进行了强烈调整,优于其他类别。此外,这种反应与其他具有先前已明确特征的反应特征的区域不同,例如外侧和内侧梭状回。这些发现表明,该区域在日常情况下的主要功能是支持对同种个体的思想和意图进行推理。