Neuropsychiatry Lab, Department of Medical Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel.
Department of Neurology, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
J Neurophysiol. 2021 Aug 1;126(2):464-476. doi: 10.1152/jn.00695.2020. Epub 2021 Jun 16.
"Mental travel" is a cognitive concept embodying the human capacity to intentionally disengage from the here and now, and mentally experience the world from different perspectives. We explored how individuals mentally "travel" to the point of view (POV) of other people in varying levels of personal closeness and from these perspectives process these people's social network. Under fMRI, participants were asked to "project" themselves to the POVs of four different people: a close other, a nonclose other, a famous-person, and their own-self, and rate the level of affiliation (closeness) to different individuals in the respective social network. Participants were always faster making judgments from their own POV compared with other POVs (self-projection effect) and for people who were personally closer to their adopted POV (social-distance effect). Brain activity at the medial prefrontal and anterior cingulate cortex in the self-POV was higher, compared with all other conditions. Activity at the right temporoparietal junction and medial parietal cortex was found to distinguish between the personally related (self, close, and nonclose others) and unrelated (famous-person) people. No difference was found between mental travel to the POVs of close and nonclose others. Regardless of POV, the precuneus, anterior cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortex, and temporoparietal junction distinguished between close and distant individuals within the different social networks. Representational similarity analysis implicated the left retrosplenial cortex as crucial for social distance processing across all POVs. These distinctions suggest several constraints regarding our ability to adopt others' POV and process not only ours but also other people's social networks and stress the importance of proximity in social cognition. Mental-travel, the ability to mentally imagine oneself in a different place and time, is a fundamental cognitive concept. Investigation of mental-travel in the social domain under fMRI revealed that a network of brain regions, largely overlapping the default-mode-network, is responsible for "traveling" to points of view of different others; moreover, this network distinguishes between closer and less-close others, suggesting that mental-travel is a rich dynamical process, encompassing individuals in different proximities and these individuals' social network.
“心理旅行”是一个认知概念,体现了人类从当下环境中有意脱离并从不同视角体验世界的能力。我们探索了个体如何在不同程度的个人亲密程度下,从他人的角度出发来“旅行”,并从这些角度来处理这些人的社交网络。在 fMRI 下,参与者被要求将自己投射到四个不同的人的观点中:亲密的他人、非亲密的他人、名人以及自己,并对各自社交网络中的不同个体的亲近程度进行评分。与其他观点相比,参与者从自己的观点出发做出判断总是更快(自我投射效应),并且对于与他们所采用的观点更接近的人(社交距离效应)也是如此。与所有其他条件相比,在自我观点中,内侧前额叶和前扣带皮层的大脑活动更高。在右侧颞顶联合区和内侧顶叶皮层发现的活动可以区分与个人相关的(自我、亲密和非亲密的他人)和不相关的(名人)人。在心理旅行到亲密和非亲密他人的观点之间没有发现差异。无论观点如何,楔前叶、前扣带皮层、前额叶皮层和颞顶联合区都可以区分不同社交网络中的亲密和遥远的个体。代表性相似性分析表明,左后扣带回皮层对于所有观点下的社会距离处理都至关重要。这些区别表明,我们有能力采用他人的观点并处理不仅是我们的观点,还有其他人的社交网络,这受到一些限制,并强调了在社会认知中接近的重要性。心理旅行,即想象自己在不同地点和时间的能力,是一个基本的认知概念。在 fMRI 下对社会领域的心理旅行进行研究表明,大脑的一个网络,主要与默认模式网络重叠,负责“旅行”到不同他人的观点;此外,该网络可以区分更亲密和不那么亲密的人,这表明心理旅行是一个丰富的动态过程,包括不同亲密程度的个体和这些个体的社交网络。