Assigning a social status from face adornments: an fMRI study

M Salagnon, F d’Errico, S Rigaud, E Mellet
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Abstract

For at least 150,000 years, the human body has been culturally modified by the wearing of personal ornaments and probably by painting with red pigment. The present study used functional magnetic resonance imaging to explore the brain networks involved in attributing social status from face decorations. Results showed the fusiform gyrus, orbitofrontal cortex, and salience network were involved in social encoding, categorization, and evaluation. The hippocampus and parahippocampus were activated due to the memory and associative skills required for the task, while the inferior frontal gyrus likely interpreted face ornaments as symbols. Resting-state functional connectivity analysis clarified the interaction between these regions. The study highlights the importance of these neural interactions in the symbolic interpretation of social markers on the human face, which were likely active in early Homo species and intensified with Homo sapiens populations as more complex technologies were developed to culturalize the human face.

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从脸部装饰品判断社会地位:fMRI 研究
摘要 至少在 15 万年前,人类就已经通过佩戴个人装饰品以及可能通过涂抹红色颜料对身体进行文化修饰。本研究利用功能磁共振成像技术探讨了从面部装饰归因社会地位所涉及的大脑网络。结果显示,纺锤形回、眶额皮层和显著性网络参与了社会编码、分类和评价。海马和副海马因任务所需的记忆和联想能力而被激活,而额下回则可能将脸部装饰品解释为符号。静息态功能连接分析阐明了这些区域之间的相互作用。这项研究强调了这些神经交互作用在人类面部社会标记的符号解释中的重要性,它们很可能在早期智人物种中就很活跃,并随着智人种群发展出更复杂的技术使人类面部文化化而得到加强。
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