Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 43 Vassar Street, 46-4021, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA.
Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience, Division of Developmental Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 1 Autumn Street, Rm. 527, Boston, MA, 02215, USA.
Nat Commun. 2020 Jun 26;11(1):3246. doi: 10.1038/s41467-020-17004-y.
Language provides a rich source of information about other people's thoughts and feelings. Consequently, delayed access to language may influence conceptual development in Theory of Mind (ToM). We use functional magnetic resonance imaging and behavioral tasks to study ToM development in child (n = 33, 4-12 years old) and adult (n = 36) fluent signers of American Sign Language (ASL), and characterize neural ToM responses during ASL and movie-viewing tasks. Participants include deaf children whose first exposure to ASL was delayed up to 7 years (n = 12). Neural responses to ToM stories (specifically, selectivity of the right temporo-parietal junction) in these children resembles responses previously observed in young children, who have similar linguistic experience, rather than those in age-matched native-signing children, who have similar biological maturation. Early linguistic experience may facilitate ToM development, via the development of a selective brain region for ToM.
语言为了解他人的思想和感受提供了丰富的信息来源。因此,语言获取的延迟可能会影响心理理论(Theory of Mind,ToM)的概念发展。我们使用功能磁共振成像和行为任务来研究美国手语(American Sign Language,ASL)的流利使用者(儿童:n=33,4-12 岁;成人:n=36)的 ToM 发展,并在 ASL 和电影观看任务期间描述神经 ToM 反应。参与者包括其 ASL 首次接触延迟至 7 年以上的聋童(n=12)。这些儿童对 ToM 故事的神经反应(特别是右侧颞顶联合区的选择性)与具有类似语言经验的幼儿的反应相似,而与具有相似生物成熟度的年龄匹配的母语手语儿童的反应不同。早期的语言经验可能通过对 ToM 的选择性大脑区域的发展来促进 ToM 的发展。