Healey Meghan L, Grossman Murray
Penn Department of Neurology and Frontotemporal Degeneration Center, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Neuroscience Graduate Group, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA, United States.
Front Neurol. 2018 Jun 25;9:491. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00491. eCollection 2018.
Perspective-taking refers to the ability to recognize another person's point of view. Crucial to the development of interpersonal relationships and prosocial behavior, perspective-taking is closely linked to human empathy, and like empathy, perspective-taking is commonly subdivided into cognitive and affective components. While the two components of empathy have been frequently compared, the differences between cognitive and affective perspective-taking have been under-investigated in the cognitive neuroscience literature to date. Here, we define cognitive perspective-taking as the ability to infer an agent's thoughts or beliefs, and affective perspective-taking as the ability to infer an agent's feelings or emotions. In this paper, we review data from functional imaging studies in healthy adults as well as behavioral and structural imaging studies in patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia in order to determine if there are distinct neural correlates for cognitive and affective perspective-taking. Data suggest that there are both shared and non-shared cognitive and anatomic substrates. For example, while both types of perspective-taking engage regions such as the temporoparietal junction, precuneus, and temporal poles, only affective perspective-taking engages regions within the limbic system and basal ganglia. Differences are also observed in prefrontal cortex: while affective perspective-taking engages ventromedial prefrontal cortex, cognitive perspective-taking engages dorsomedial prefrontal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). To corroborate these findings, we also examine if cognitive and affective perspective-taking share the same relationship with executive functions. While it is clear that affective perspective-taking requires emotional substrates that are less prominent in cognitive perspective-taking, it remains unknown to what extent executive functions (including working memory, mental set switching, and inhibitory control) may contribute to each process. Overall results indicate that cognitive perspective-taking is dependent on executive functioning (particularly mental set switching), while affective perspective-taking is less so. We conclude with a critique of the current literature, with a focus on the different outcome measures used across studies and misconceptions due to imprecise terminology, as well as recommendations for future research.
换位思考是指能够认识到他人观点的能力。它对于人际关系和亲社会行为的发展至关重要,与人类的同理心密切相关,并且和同理心一样,通常被细分为认知和情感成分。虽然同理心的这两个成分经常被比较,但认知性和情感性换位思考之间的差异在认知神经科学文献中迄今为止尚未得到充分研究。在这里,我们将认知性换位思考定义为推断主体的想法或信念的能力,将情感性换位思考定义为推断主体的感受或情绪的能力。在本文中,我们回顾了健康成年人功能成像研究以及行为变异型额颞叶痴呆患者的行为和结构成像研究数据,以确定认知性和情感性换位思考是否存在不同的神经关联。数据表明,存在共享和非共享的认知及解剖学基础。例如,虽然两种类型的换位思考都涉及颞顶联合区、楔前叶和颞极等区域,但只有情感性换位思考涉及边缘系统和基底神经节内的区域。前额叶皮质也观察到了差异:情感性换位思考涉及腹内侧前额叶皮质,而认知性换位思考涉及背内侧前额叶皮质和背外侧前额叶皮质(DLPFC)。为了证实这些发现,我们还研究了认知性和情感性换位思考与执行功能是否具有相同的关系。虽然很明显情感性换位思考需要认知性换位思考中不那么突出的情感基础,但执行功能(包括工作记忆、思维定势转换和抑制控制)在每个过程中可能起到多大作用仍然未知。总体结果表明,认知性换位思考依赖于执行功能(特别是思维定势转换),而情感性换位思考则不然。我们最后对当前文献进行了批判,重点关注各研究中使用的不同结果测量方法以及由于术语不精确导致的误解,同时还提出了未来研究的建议。