Wurm Moritz F, Caramazza Alfonso, Lingnau Angelika
Cognitive Neuropsychology Laboratory, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138,
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, 38068 Rovereto (TN), Italy.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jan 18;37(3):562-575. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1717-16.2016.
How neural specificity for distinct conceptual knowledge categories arises is central for understanding the organization of semantic memory in the human brain. Although there is a large body of research on the neural processing of distinct object categories, the organization of action categories remains largely unknown. In particular, it is unknown whether different action categories follow a specific topographical organization on the cortical surface analogously to the category-specific organization of object knowledge. Here, we tested whether the neural representation of action knowledge is organized in terms of nonsocial versus social and object-unrelated versus object-related actions (sociality and transitivity, respectively, hereafter). We hypothesized a major distinction of sociality and transitivity along dorsal and ventral lateral occipitotemporal cortex (LOTC), respectively. Using fMRI-based multivoxel pattern analysis, we identified neural representations of action information associated with sociality and transitivity in bilateral LOTC. Representational similarity analysis revealed a dissociation between dorsal and ventral LOTC. We found that action representations in dorsal LOTC are segregated along features of sociality, whereas action representations in ventral LOTC are segregated along features of transitivity. In addition, representations of sociality and transitivity features were found more anteriorly in LOTC than representations of specific subtypes of actions, suggesting a posterior-anterior gradient from concrete to abstract action features. These findings elucidate how the neural representations of perceptually and conceptually diverse actions are organized in distinct subsystems in the LOTC.
The lateral occipitotemporal cortex (LOTC) is critically involved in the recognition of objects and actions, but our knowledge about the underlying organizing principles is limited. Here, we discovered a dorsal-ventral distinction of actions in LOTC: dorsal LOTC represents actions based on sociality (how much an action is directed to another person) in proximity to person knowledge. In contrast, ventral LOTC represents actions based on transitivity (how much an action involves the interaction with inanimate objects) in proximity to tools/artifacts in ventral LOTC, suggesting a mutually dependent organization of actions and objects. In addition, we found a posterior-to-anterior organization of the LOTC for concrete and abstract representations, respectively. Our findings provide important insights about the organization of actions in LOTC.
不同概念知识类别的神经特异性如何产生,对于理解人类大脑中语义记忆的组织至关重要。尽管关于不同物体类别的神经处理已有大量研究,但动作类别的组织在很大程度上仍不清楚。特别是,不同的动作类别是否类似于物体知识的类别特异性组织,在皮质表面遵循特定的拓扑组织尚不清楚。在这里,我们测试了动作知识的神经表征是否按照非社会与社会以及与物体无关与与物体相关的动作(分别为社会性和及物性,以下简称)进行组织。我们假设社会性和及物性分别沿背侧和腹侧枕颞外侧皮质(LOTC)存在主要区别。使用基于功能磁共振成像的多体素模式分析,我们在双侧LOTC中识别出与社会性和及物性相关的动作信息的神经表征。表征相似性分析揭示了背侧和腹侧LOTC之间的分离。我们发现背侧LOTC中的动作表征根据社会性特征进行分离,而腹侧LOTC中的动作表征根据及物性特征进行分离。此外,在LOTC中,社会性和及物性特征的表征比特定动作子类型的表征更靠前,这表明从具体到抽象动作特征存在后-前梯度。这些发现阐明了在LOTC的不同子系统中,感知和概念上不同的动作的神经表征是如何组织的。
枕颞外侧皮质(LOTC)在物体和动作的识别中起着关键作用,但我们对其潜在组织原则的了解有限。在这里,我们发现LOTC中动作存在背-腹区分:背侧LOTC在靠近人物知识的区域基于社会性(一个动作指向另一个人的程度)来表征动作。相比之下,腹侧LOTC在靠近腹侧LOTC中工具/人工制品的区域基于及物性(一个动作涉及与无生命物体相互作用的程度)来表征动作,这表明动作和物体存在相互依赖的组织关系。此外,我们分别发现LOTC中具体和抽象表征存在从后到前的组织关系。我们的发现为LOTC中动作的组织提供了重要见解。