Ichwansyah Rizal, Onda Keigo, Egawa Jun, Matsuo Takeshi, Suzuki Takafumi, Someya Toshiyuki, Hasegawa Isao, Kawasaki Keisuke
Department of Neurophysiology, Niigata University School of Medicine, Niigata, Japan.
Department of Psychiatry, Niigata University School of Medicine, Niigata, Japan.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2024 Dec 13;18:1478439. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2024.1478439. eCollection 2024.
Animacy perception, the ability to discern living from non-living entities, is crucial for survival and social interaction, as it includes recognizing abstract concepts such as movement, purpose, and intentions. This process involves interpreting cues that may suggest the intentions or actions of others. It engages the temporal cortex (TC), particularly the superior temporal sulcus (STS) and the adjacent region of the inferior temporal cortex (ITC), as well as the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC). However, it remains unclear how animacy is dynamically encoded over time in these brain areas and whether its processing is distributed or localized. In this study, we addressed these questions by employing a symbolic categorization task involving animate and inanimate objects using natural movie stimuli. Simultaneously, electrocorticography were conducted in both the TC and dmPFC. Time-frequency analysis revealed region-specific frequency representations throughout the observation of the movies. Spatial searchlight decoding analysis demonstrated that animacy processing is represented in a distributed manner. Regions encoding animacy information were found to be dispersed across the fundus and lip of the STS, as well as in the ITC. Next, we examined whether these dispersed regions form functional networks. Independent component analysis revealed that the spatial distribution of the component with the most significant animacy information corresponded with the dispersed regions identified by the spatial decoding analysis. Furthermore, Granger causality analysis indicated that these regions exhibit frequency-specific directional functional connectivity, with a general trend of causal influence from the ITC to STS across multiple frequency bands. Notably, a prominent feedback flow in the alpha band from the ITC to both the ventral bank and fundus of the STS was identified. These findings suggest a distributed and functionally interconnected neural substrate for animacy processing across the STS and ITC.
感知生物性,即区分生物与非生物实体的能力,对于生存和社交互动至关重要,因为它包括识别诸如运动、目的和意图等抽象概念。这个过程涉及解读可能暗示他人意图或行动的线索。它会激活颞叶皮质(TC),特别是颞上沟(STS)和颞下皮质(ITC)的相邻区域,以及背内侧前额叶皮质(dmPFC)。然而,目前尚不清楚生物性在这些脑区中如何随时间动态编码,以及其处理是分布式的还是局部化的。在本研究中,我们通过使用涉及有生命和无生命物体的符号分类任务并利用自然电影刺激来解决这些问题。同时,在TC和dmPFC区域进行了皮层脑电图记录。时频分析揭示了在整个电影观察过程中特定区域的频率表征。空间搜索光解码分析表明,生物性处理以分布式方式呈现。发现编码生物性信息的区域分散在STS的底部和唇部,以及ITC中。接下来,我们研究了这些分散的区域是否形成功能网络。独立成分分析表明,具有最显著生物性信息的成分的空间分布与空间解码分析确定的分散区域相对应。此外,格兰杰因果分析表明,这些区域表现出频率特定的方向性功能连接,在多个频段上普遍存在从ITC到STS的因果影响趋势。值得注意的是,在α波段中发现了从ITC到STS腹侧岸和底部的显著反馈流。这些发现表明,在STS和ITC区域存在一个分布式且功能相互连接的神经基质用于生物性处理。