交流互动中对时空线索的偶然视觉处理:fMRI 研究

Anthony P. Atkinson, Q. Vuong
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摘要

摘要 在许多日常情况下,对人与人之间的社交互动进行解读非常重要。人与人之间相对身体动作的协调可能会提供视觉线索,观察者可以不加注意地利用这些线索来区分这种社交互动和独立行动的人的动作。之前的研究强调了参与互动与独立行动人群视觉处理的大脑区域,包括后颞上沟以及侧枕颞和顶叶皮层区域。与之前的研究不同,我们的研究重点是社会互动的偶然视觉处理,即观察者注意力焦点之外的肢体动作处理。在本研究中,我们利用功能成像技术测量了参与者在看到描绘交流互动或个人动作的点光源二人组时的大脑激活情况。然而,他们的任务是分辨屏幕上两个十字架的亮度。为了研究可能处理点光显示之间的空间和时间关系的脑区,我们反转了一个代理的面向方向,或者对点的局部运动进行了空间扰乱。只有当两个代理面对面时,交流互动的偶然处理才会引起右前STS的激活。通过减去大脑对点光源乱码显示的激活来控制局部运动的差异,发现顶叶皮层以及左侧杏仁核和脑干/小脑对交流互动有显著激活。我们的研究结果对之前的研究进行了补充,并表明可能会招募更多的脑区来偶然处理空间和时间上的偶然性,从而将一起行动的人与单独行动的人区分开来。
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Incidental visual processing of spatiotemporal cues in communicative interactions: An fMRI investigation
Abstract The interpretation of social interactions between people is important in many daily situations. The coordination of the relative body movements between them may provide visual cues that observers use without attention to discriminate such social interactions from the actions of people acting independently of each other. Previous studies highlighted brain regions involved in the visual processing of interacting versus independently acting people, including posterior superior temporal sulcus, and areas of lateral occipitotemporal and parietal cortices. Unlike these previous studies, we focused on the incidental visual processing of social interactions; that is, the processing of the body movements outside the observers’ focus of attention. In the current study, we used functional imaging to measure brain activation while participants were presented with point-light dyads portraying communicative interactions or individual actions. However, their task was to discriminate the brightness of two crosses also on the screen. To investigate brain regions that may process the spatial and temporal relationships between the point-light displays, we either reversed the facing direction of one agent or spatially scrambled the local motion of the points. Incidental processing of communicative interactions elicited activation in right anterior STS only when the two agents were facing each other. Controlling for differences in local motion by subtracting brain activation to scrambled versions of the point-light displays revealed significant activation in parietal cortex for communicative interactions, as well as left amygdala and brain stem/cerebellum. Our results complement previous studies and suggest that additional brain regions may be recruited to incidentally process the spatial and temporal contingencies that distinguish people acting together from people acting individually.
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