Foster Celia, Zhao Mintao, Bolkart Timo, Black Michael J, Bartels Andreas, Bülthoff Isabelle
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen, Germany; Max Planck Institute for Intelligent Systems, Tübingen, Germany; International Max Planck Research School for Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen, Germany; School of Psychology, University of East Anglia, United Kingdom.
Neuroimage. 2022 Feb 1;246:118783. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118783. Epub 2021 Dec 5.
Face and body orientation convey important information for us to understand other people's actions, intentions and social interactions. It has been shown that several occipitotemporal areas respond differently to faces or bodies of different orientations. However, whether face and body orientation are processed by partially overlapping or completely separate brain networks remains unclear, as the neural coding of face and body orientation is often investigated separately. Here, we recorded participants' brain activity using fMRI while they viewed faces and bodies shown from three different orientations, while attending to either orientation or identity information. Using multivoxel pattern analysis we investigated which brain regions process face and body orientation respectively, and which regions encode both face and body orientation in a stimulus-independent manner. We found that patterns of neural responses evoked by different stimulus orientations in the occipital face area, extrastriate body area, lateral occipital complex and right early visual cortex could generalise across faces and bodies, suggesting a stimulus-independent encoding of person orientation in occipitotemporal cortex. This finding was consistent across functionally defined regions of interest and a whole-brain searchlight approach. The fusiform face area responded to face but not body orientation, suggesting that orientation responses in this area are face-specific. Moreover, neural responses to orientation were remarkably consistent regardless of whether participants attended to the orientation of faces and bodies or not. Together, these results demonstrate that face and body orientation are processed in a partially overlapping brain network, with a stimulus-independent neural code for face and body orientation in occipitotemporal cortex.
面部和身体朝向为我们理解他人的行为、意图和社交互动传递着重要信息。研究表明,几个枕颞区域对不同朝向的面部或身体会有不同反应。然而,面部和身体朝向是由部分重叠还是完全分离的脑网络进行处理仍不明确,因为面部和身体朝向的神经编码通常是分开研究的。在此,我们在参与者观看从三种不同朝向呈现的面部和身体时,使用功能磁共振成像记录他们的大脑活动,同时让他们关注朝向或身份信息。我们采用多体素模式分析来研究哪些脑区分别处理面部和身体朝向,以及哪些区域以与刺激无关的方式对两者的朝向进行编码。我们发现,枕颞面部区域、纹外身体区域、枕外侧复合体和右侧早期视觉皮层中不同刺激朝向诱发的神经反应模式能够在面部和身体之间进行泛化,这表明枕颞皮层中存在与刺激无关的人物朝向编码。这一发现通过功能定义的感兴趣区域和全脑搜索light方法得到了一致验证。梭状回面部区域对面部朝向有反应,但对身体朝向无反应,这表明该区域的朝向反应具有面部特异性。此外,无论参与者是否关注面部和身体的朝向,对朝向的神经反应都非常一致。总之,这些结果表明,面部和身体朝向在部分重叠的脑网络中进行处理,枕颞皮层中存在与刺激无关的面部和身体朝向神经编码。