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时间自我压缩:行为和神经证据表明,过去和未来的自我在远离现在时被压缩。

Temporal self-compression: Behavioral and neural evidence that past and future selves are compressed as they move away from the present.

机构信息

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755.

Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755

出版信息

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2021 Dec 7;118(49). doi: 10.1073/pnas.2101403118.

Abstract

A basic principle of perception is that as objects increase in distance from an observer, they also become logarithmically compressed in perception (i.e., not differentiated from one another), making them hard to distinguish. Could this basic principle apply to perhaps our most meaningful mental representation: our own sense of self? Here, we report four studies that suggest selves are increasingly non-discriminable with temporal distance from the present as well. In Studies 1 through 3, participants made trait ratings across various time points in the past and future. We found that participants compressed their past and future selves, relative to their present self. This effect was preferential to the self and could not be explained by the alternative possibility that individuals simply perceive arbitrary self-change with time irrespective of temporal distance. In Study 4, we tested for neural evidence of temporal self-compression by having participants complete trait ratings across time points while undergoing functional MRI. Representational similarity analysis was used to determine whether neural self-representations are compressed with temporal distance as well. We found evidence of temporal self-compression in areas of the default network, including medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex. Specifically, neural pattern similarity between self-representations was logarithmically compressed with temporal distance. Taken together, these findings reveal a "temporal self-compression" effect, with temporal selves becoming increasingly non-discriminable with distance from the present.

摘要

感知的一个基本原则是,随着物体与观察者之间距离的增加,它们在感知中也会呈对数压缩(即彼此之间没有区别),从而难以区分。这个基本原则是否适用于我们最有意义的心理表象:我们自己的自我意识?在这里,我们报告了四项研究,表明随着与现在的时间距离的增加,自我也变得越来越难以区分。在研究 1 至 3 中,参与者在过去和未来的不同时间点上进行了特质评定。我们发现,参与者相对于现在的自我,压缩了过去和未来的自我。这种效应优先于自我,不能用个体随着时间的推移简单地感知任意的自我变化而与时间距离无关的替代可能性来解释。在研究 4 中,我们通过让参与者在进行功能磁共振成像的同时在时间点上完成特质评定,测试了时间自我压缩的神经证据。使用代表性相似性分析来确定神经自我表现是否也随着时间距离而压缩。我们在默认网络的区域中发现了时间自我压缩的证据,包括内侧前额叶皮层和后扣带回皮层。具体来说,自我表现之间的神经模式相似性随着时间距离呈对数压缩。总之,这些发现揭示了一种“时间自我压缩”效应,即随着与现在的时间距离的增加,时间自我变得越来越难以区分。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6ed5/8670431/71826ffb655e/pnas.202101403fig01.jpg

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