Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139;
McGovern Institute of Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 Oct 24;114(43):E9145-E9152. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1714471114. Epub 2017 Oct 9.
Primates are highly attuned not just to social characteristics of individual agents, but also to social interactions between multiple agents. Here we report a neural correlate of the representation of social interactions in the human brain. Specifically, we observe a strong univariate response in the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS) to stimuli depicting social interactions between two agents, compared with () pairs of agents not interacting with each other, () physical interactions between inanimate objects, and () individual animate agents pursuing goals and interacting with inanimate objects. We further show that this region contains information about the nature of the social interaction-specifically, whether one agent is helping or hindering the other. This sensitivity to social interactions is strongest in a specific subregion of the pSTS but extends to a lesser extent into nearby regions previously implicated in theory of mind and dynamic face perception. This sensitivity to the presence and nature of social interactions is not easily explainable in terms of low-level visual features, attention, or the animacy, actions, or goals of individual agents. This region may underlie our ability to understand the structure of our social world and navigate within it.
灵长类动物不仅高度适应个体行为者的社会特征,还适应多个行为者之间的社会互动。在这里,我们报告了人类大脑中代表社会互动的神经关联。具体来说,我们观察到后上颞叶(pSTS)对描绘两个行为者之间社会互动的刺激有强烈的单变量反应,而()两个没有相互作用的行为者,()无生命物体之间的物理相互作用,以及()个体有生命的行为者追求目标并与无生命物体相互作用。我们进一步表明,该区域包含有关社会互动性质的信息——具体来说,一个行为者是否在帮助或阻碍另一个行为者。这种对社会互动的敏感性在 pSTS 的一个特定亚区最强,但在一定程度上延伸到先前涉及心理理论和动态面部感知的附近区域。这种对社会互动的存在和性质的敏感性不能用低水平的视觉特征、注意力或个体行为者的能动性、动作或目标来轻易解释。该区域可能是我们理解社交世界结构并在其中导航的基础。