Karagoz Ata B, Morse Sarah J, Reagh Zachariah M
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, 63105, USA.
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, 63105, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2023 Dec 15;191:108729. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2023.108729. Epub 2023 Nov 10.
Social information is a centerpiece of human experience. Despite a wealth of research into the way we understand social relationships and how aspects of social life might be supported by the brain, relatively little is known about how the brain represents individual people and their relationships with others. How do intrinsic networks in the brain track people and their connections in complex situations? Here, we sought to understand this issue using an open neuroimaging dataset in which people freely viewed "The Grand Budapest Hotel." Using support vector machine classification of fMRI activity patterns, we found that character identity could be decoded throughout subsystems of the brain's "Default Mode" Network, especially in regions of an Anterior Temporal and a Medial Prefrontal subsystem, as well as a Medial Temporal Network (MTN). We tested character relationships in two ways - onscreen co-occurrence and shared semantic information from an independent sample of character descriptions - and found evidence for these representations throughout the "Default Mode" Network, and the MTN. The extent to which each variant of character relationships fit neural patterns differed across networks, with abstract semantic relatedness being especially prominent in regions of Anterior Temporal and Medial Prefrontal Networks. These data show that subsystems of the brain's "Default Mode" Network and MTN carry information about individual people as well as their connections, and highlight a particularly strong role for the Anterior Temporal network in representing this information.
社会信息是人类体验的核心。尽管对我们理解社会关系的方式以及社会生活的各个方面如何可能得到大脑支持进行了大量研究,但对于大脑如何表征个体以及他们与他人的关系却知之甚少。大脑中的内在网络如何在复杂情境中追踪人物及其关系?在这里,我们试图使用一个开放的神经影像数据集来理解这个问题,在该数据集中人们可以自由观看《布达佩斯大饭店》。通过对功能磁共振成像(fMRI)活动模式进行支持向量机分类,我们发现可以在大脑“默认模式”网络的各个子系统中解码角色身份,特别是在前颞叶和内侧前额叶子系统以及内侧颞叶网络(MTN)的区域。我们通过两种方式测试角色关系——屏幕上的同时出现以及来自角色描述独立样本的共享语义信息——并在整个“默认模式”网络和MTN中发现了这些表征的证据。不同网络中每种角色关系变体与神经模式的拟合程度各不相同,抽象语义相关性在颞叶前部和内侧前额叶网络区域尤为突出。这些数据表明,大脑“默认模式”网络和MTN的子系统携带有关个体及其关系的信息,并突出了前颞叶网络在表征此信息方面的特别重要作用。