Department of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02114, USA.
Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Science. 2021 Oct 22;374(6566):eabb4149. doi: 10.1126/science.abb4149.
The ability to interact effectively within social groups is essential to primate and human behavior. Yet understanding the neural processes that underlie the interactive behavior of groups or by which neurons solve the basic problem of coding for multiple agents has remained a challenge. By tracking the interindividual dynamics of groups of three interacting rhesus macaques, we discover detailed representations of the groups’ behavior by neurons in the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, reflecting not only the other agents’ identities but also their specific interactions, social context, actions, and outcomes. We show how these cells collectively represent the interaction between specific group members and their reciprocation, retaliation, and past behaviors. We also show how they influence the animals’ own upcoming decisions and their ability to form beneficial agent-specific interactions. Together, these findings reveal prefrontal neurons that code for the agency identity of others and a cellular mechanism that could support the interactive behavior of social groups.
有效互动的能力是灵长类动物和人类行为的基础。然而,理解群体互动行为的神经过程,或者神经元如何解决为多个主体编码的基本问题,一直是一个挑战。通过跟踪三组相互作用的恒河猴的个体间动态,我们发现背内侧前额叶皮层中的神经元对群体行为有详细的表现,这不仅反映了其他主体的身份,还反映了它们的具体互动、社会背景、行为和结果。我们展示了这些细胞如何集体表现特定群体成员之间的互动以及它们的相互作用、报复和过去的行为。我们还展示了它们如何影响动物自己即将做出的决定以及它们形成有益的特定主体间互动的能力。总的来说,这些发现揭示了编码他人主体身份的前额叶神经元,以及一种可能支持社会群体互动行为的细胞机制。