Piva Matthew, Zhang Xian, Noah J Adam, Chang Steve W C, Hirsch Joy
Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States.
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2017 Nov 23;11:571. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2017.00571. eCollection 2017.
Interpersonal interaction is the essence of human social behavior. However, conventional neuroimaging techniques have tended to focus on social cognition in single individuals rather than on dyads or groups. As a result, relatively little is understood about the neural events that underlie face-to-face interaction. We resolved some of the technical obstacles inherent in studying interaction using a novel imaging modality and aimed to identify neural mechanisms engaged both within and across brains in an ecologically valid instance of interpersonal competition. Functional near-infrared spectroscopy was utilized to simultaneously measure hemodynamic signals representing neural activity in pairs of subjects playing poker against each other (human-human condition) or against computer opponents (human-computer condition). Previous fMRI findings concerning single subjects confirm that neural areas recruited during social cognition paradigms are individually sensitive to human-human and human-computer conditions. However, it is not known whether face-to-face interactions between opponents can extend these findings. We hypothesize distributed effects due to live processing and specific variations in across-brain coherence not observable in single-subject paradigms. Angular gyrus (AG), a component of the temporal-parietal junction (TPJ) previously found to be sensitive to socially relevant cues, was selected as a seed to measure within-brain functional connectivity. Increased connectivity was confirmed between AG and bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) as well as a complex including the left subcentral area (SCA) and somatosensory cortex (SS) during interaction with a human opponent. These distributed findings were supported by contrast measures that indicated increased activity at the left dlPFC and frontopolar area that partially overlapped with the region showing increased functional connectivity with AG. Across-brain analyses of neural coherence between the players revealed synchrony between dlPFC and supramarginal gyrus (SMG) and SS in addition to synchrony between AG and the fusiform gyrus (FG) and SMG. These findings present the first evidence of a frontal-parietal neural complex including the TPJ, dlPFC, SCA, SS, and FG that is more active during human-to-human social cognition both within brains (functional connectivity) and across brains (across-brain coherence), supporting a model of functional integration of socially and strategically relevant information during live face-to-face competitive behaviors.
人际互动是人类社会行为的本质。然而,传统的神经成像技术往往侧重于个体的社会认知,而非二元组或群体。因此,对于面对面互动背后的神经活动,我们了解得相对较少。我们通过一种新颖的成像方式解决了研究互动中固有的一些技术障碍,旨在确定在人际竞争的生态有效实例中大脑内部和大脑之间参与的神经机制。功能近红外光谱被用于同时测量在相互玩扑克的成对受试者(人-人条件)或与计算机对手玩扑克(人-机条件)时代表神经活动的血液动力学信号。先前关于单个受试者的功能磁共振成像研究结果证实,在社会认知范式中招募的神经区域对人-人条件和人-机条件分别敏感。然而,对手之间的面对面互动是否能扩展这些发现尚不清楚。我们假设由于实时处理会产生分布式效应,并且存在跨大脑连贯性的特定变化,这些在单受试者范式中是无法观察到的。角回(AG)是颞顶联合区(TPJ)的一个组成部分,先前发现它对社会相关线索敏感,被选作测量大脑内功能连接的种子区域。在与人类对手互动期间,证实了AG与双侧背外侧前额叶皮层(dlPFC)以及包括左中央下区(SCA)和体感皮层(SS)的一个复合体之间的连接性增加。这些分布式发现得到了对比测量的支持,对比测量表明左dlPFC和额极区的活动增加,部分与显示与AG功能连接增加的区域重叠。对玩家之间神经连贯性的跨大脑分析揭示了dlPFC与缘上回(SMG)和SS之间的同步,以及AG与梭状回(FG)和SMG之间的同步。这些发现首次证明了一个包括TPJ、dlPFC、SCA、SS和FG的额顶神经复合体,在人对人的社会认知过程中,无论是在大脑内部(功能连接)还是大脑之间(跨大脑连贯性)都更加活跃,支持了在实时面对面竞争行为中社会和战略相关信息功能整合的模型。