Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire 03755
J Neurosci. 2022 Dec 7;42(49):9211-9226. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0859-22.2022. Epub 2022 Oct 24.
Social information is some of the most ambiguous content we encounter in our daily lives, yet in experimental contexts, percepts of social interactions-that is, whether an interaction is present and if so, the nature of that interaction-are often dichotomized as correct or incorrect based on experimenter-assigned labels. Here, we investigated the behavioral and neural correlates of subjective (or conscious) social perception using data from the Human Connectome Project in which participants ( = 1049; 486 men, 562 women) viewed animations of geometric shapes during fMRI and indicated whether they perceived a social interaction or random motion. Critically, rather than experimenter-assigned labels, we used observers' own reports of "Social" or "Non-social" to classify percepts and characterize brain activity, including leveraging a particularly ambiguous animation perceived as "Social" by some but "Non-social" by others to control for visual input. Behaviorally, observers were biased toward perceiving information as social (vs non-social); and neurally, observer reports (compared with experimenter labels) explained more variance in activity across much of the brain. Using "Unsure" reports, we identified several regions that responded parametrically to perceived socialness. Neural responses to social versus non-social content diverged early in time and in the cortical hierarchy. Finally, individuals with higher internalizing trait scores showed both a higher response bias toward "Social" and an inverse relationship with activity in default mode and visual association areas while scanning for social information. Findings underscore the subjective nature of social perception and the importance of using observer reports to study percepts of social interactions. Simple animations involving two or more geometric shapes have been used as a gold standard to understand social cognition and impairments therein. Yet, experimenter-assigned labels of what is social versus non-social are frequently used as a ground truth, despite the fact that percepts of such ambiguous social stimuli are highly subjective. Here, we used behavioral and fMRI data from a large sample of neurotypical individuals to show that participants' responses reveal subtle behavioral biases, help us study neural responses to social content more precisely, and covary with internalizing trait scores. Our findings underscore the subjective nature of social perception and the importance of considering observer reports in studying behavioral and neural dynamics of social perception.
社会信息是我们日常生活中遇到的最模糊的内容之一,但在实验环境中,对社会互动的感知——即互动是否存在,如果存在,互动的性质——通常根据实验者分配的标签分为正确或错误。在这里,我们使用来自人类连接体计划的数据调查了主观(或有意识)社会感知的行为和神经相关性,在该计划中,参与者(=1049;486 名男性,562 名女性)在 fMRI 期间观看几何形状的动画,并表示他们是否感知到社会互动或随机运动。关键是,我们使用观察者自己报告的“社会”或“非社会”来分类感知,而不是使用实验者分配的标签,并描述大脑活动,包括利用一些人认为“社会”但另一些人认为“非社会”的特别模糊的动画来控制视觉输入。行为上,观察者倾向于将信息感知为社会(与非社会);神经上,与实验者标签相比,观察者报告解释了大脑活动的更多变化。使用“不确定”报告,我们确定了几个区域,这些区域对感知的社会性做出了参数响应。社会与非社会内容的神经反应在时间上和皮质层次上很早就出现了分歧。最后,具有较高内化特质得分的个体在扫描社会信息时,表现出对“社会”的反应偏好更高,与默认模式和视觉联想区域的活动呈反比关系。研究结果强调了社会感知的主观性以及使用观察者报告研究社会互动感知的重要性。涉及两个或更多几何形状的简单动画已被用作理解社会认知及其障碍的金标准。然而,尽管这种模糊的社会刺激的感知非常主观,但实验者分配的社会与非社会标签经常被用作基准。在这里,我们使用来自大量神经典型个体的行为和 fMRI 数据表明,参与者的反应揭示了微妙的行为偏见,帮助我们更精确地研究神经对社会内容的反应,并与内化特质分数相关。我们的研究结果强调了社会感知的主观性以及在研究社会感知的行为和神经动态时考虑观察者报告的重要性。