Suppr超能文献

小脑、基底神经节和新皮层支持对动态社会行动序列的心理化:激活与连通性的元分析

Mentalizing About Dynamic Social Action Sequences Is Supported by the Cerebellum, Basal Ganglia, and Neocortex: A Meta-Analysis of Activation and Connectivity.

作者信息

Van Overwalle Frank, Heleven Elien, Haihambo Naem, Li Meijia, Ma Qianying, Pu Min, Baeken Chris, Deroost Natacha, Baetens Kris

机构信息

Vrije Universiteit Brussel and Center for Neuroscience, Brussel, Belgium.

出版信息

Hum Brain Mapp. 2024 Dec 15;45(18):e70098. doi: 10.1002/hbm.70098.

Abstract

The posterior cerebellum and anterior basal ganglia are critical subcortical structures for learning and identifying dynamic action sequences, in concert with the neocortex. The present analysis investigates the role of action sequences during social mentalizing, termed here dynamic or sequential social mentalizing. Although the role of the cerebellum in dynamic social mentalizing was extensively investigated during the last decade, the basal ganglia were long ignored. We conducted an activation likelihood estimation coordinate-based meta-analysis of sequential social mentalizing tasks (with 485 participants in 17 studies). These tasks required participants to make social mentalizing inferences ranging from low-level goals to high-level beliefs and traits, while either memorizing, generating or predicting temporal sequences of the social actions involved (i.e., social sequencing condition), or not (i.e., social non-sequencing control condition), or did so for nonsocial objects (i.e., nonsocial sequencing control condition). The tasks also occasionally included inconsistencies in social behavior. Results revealed that the cerebellum exhibited a preference for social, sequencing, and inconsistent information, while the basal ganglia showed a preference for sequencing and inconsistency, without a general preference for social input. Meta-analytic connectivity analysis further showed evidence of coactivation between mentalizing areas of the cerebellum, basal ganglia and cerebral neocortex. The present work underscores the role of subcortical structures in social mentalizing about dynamic action sequences.

摘要

小脑后部和基底神经节前部是与新皮层协同作用,对学习和识别动态动作序列至关重要的皮层下结构。本分析研究了动作序列在社会心理化过程中的作用,这里称为动态或序列性社会心理化。尽管在过去十年中广泛研究了小脑在动态社会心理化中的作用,但基底神经节长期以来一直被忽视。我们对序列性社会心理化任务进行了基于激活可能性估计坐标的元分析(17项研究中的485名参与者)。这些任务要求参与者做出从低层次目标到高层次信念和特质的社会心理化推断,同时要么记忆、生成或预测所涉及社会行为的时间序列(即社会序列条件),要么不这样做(即社会非序列控制条件),或者对非社会对象这样做(即非社会序列控制条件)。这些任务偶尔也包括社会行为中的不一致性。结果显示,小脑表现出对社会、序列和不一致信息的偏好,而基底神经节则表现出对序列和不一致性的偏好,对社会输入没有普遍偏好。元分析连接性分析进一步显示了小脑、基底神经节和大脑新皮层心理化区域之间共激活的证据。目前的工作强调了皮层下结构在关于动态动作序列的社会心理化中的作用。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5ff5/11651214/b3a64c33df1c/HBM-45-e70098-g006.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验