Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Jan 25;14(1):e0211279. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0211279. eCollection 2019.
Whereas previous research has focused on the role of the rTPJ when consciously inhibiting mimicry, we test the role of the rTPJ on mimicry within a social interaction, during which mimicking occurs nonconsciously. We wanted to determine whether higher rTPJ activation always inhibits the tendency to imitate (regardless of the context) or whether it facilitates mimicry during social interactions (when mimicking is an adaptive response). Participants received either active or sham intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS: a type of stimulation that increases cortical activation) to the rTPJ. Next, we measured how much participants mimicked the hair and face touching of another person. Participants in the active stimulation condition engaged in significantly less mimicry than those in the sham stimulation condition. This finding suggests that even in a context in which mimicking is adaptive, rTPJ inhibits mimicry rather than facilitating it, supporting the hypothesis that rTPJ enhances representations of self over other regardless of the goals within a given context.
虽然之前的研究主要集中在 rTPJ 在有意识地抑制模仿时的作用,但我们在社会互动中测试了 rTPJ 在模仿中的作用,此时模仿是无意识发生的。我们想确定 rTPJ 的更高激活是否总是抑制模仿的倾向(无论上下文如何),或者它是否在社会互动中促进模仿(当模仿是一种适应性反应时)。参与者接受了 rTPJ 的主动或假间歇性 theta 爆发刺激(iTBS:一种增加皮层激活的刺激类型)。接下来,我们测量了参与者模仿他人头发和面部触摸的程度。与假刺激条件相比,主动刺激条件下的参与者的模仿行为明显减少。这一发现表明,即使在模仿是适应性的情况下,rTPJ 也会抑制模仿,而不是促进模仿,这支持了 rTPJ 增强自我而不是他人的代表的假设,而不管给定情境中的目标如何。