信念概念的神经表征:社会语义学的表征相似方法

Anna Leshinskaya, J. M. Contreras, A. Caramazza, Jason P. Mitchell
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引用次数: 18

摘要

摘要本实验确定了代表一类独立于知觉或感觉属性的概念的神经区域。在功能性磁共振成像扫描过程中,参与者查看了社会群体的名字(如无神论者、福音派和经济学家),并根据信仰属性的两个维度中的一个维度进行了一个反向相似性判断:政治取向(自由主义者到保守主义者)或唯心主义(唯心主义者到唯物主义者)。通过在拥有这些信念的各种社会群体中进行推广,这些属性概念并不与任何特定的感官质量一致,这使我们能够针对概念性而不是感性的表征。使用多体素模式探照灯分析来确定激活模式区分两个维度两端的区域:当参与者关注政治取向维度时,保守主义和自由主义社会群体;当参与者关注唯心主义维度时,精神主义和唯物主义社会群体。右侧楔前叶的一个簇显示出这样的模式,表明它携带有关信念属性概念的信息,并构成语义记忆的一部分——可能是与心理特征特别相关的一个组成部分。这一区域与大脑理论网络没有重叠,后者与楔前叶附近但不同的部分相连。这些发现对概念知识的神经组织,特别是对社会群体的理解具有启示意义。
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Neural Representations of Belief Concepts: A Representational Similarity Approach to Social Semantics
Abstract The present experiment identified neural regions that represent a class of concepts that are independent of perceptual or sensory attributes. During functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning, participants viewed names of social groups (e.g. Atheists, Evangelicals, and Economists) and performed a one‐back similarity judgment according to 1 of 2 dimensions of belief attributes: political orientation (Liberal to Conservative) or spiritualism (Spiritualist to Materialist). By generalizing across a wide variety of social groups that possess these beliefs, these attribute concepts did not coincide with any specific sensory quality, allowing us to target conceptual, rather than perceptual, representations. Multi‐voxel pattern searchlight analysis was used to identify regions in which activation patterns distinguished the 2 ends of both dimensions: Conservative from Liberal social groups when participants focused on the political orientation dimension, and spiritual from Materialist groups when participants focused on the spiritualism dimension. A cluster in right precuneus exhibited such a pattern, indicating that it carries information about belief‐attribute concepts and forms part of semantic memory—perhaps a component particularly concerned with psychological traits. This region did not overlap with the theory of mind network, which engaged nearby, but distinct, parts of precuneus. These findings have implications for the neural organization of conceptual knowledge, especially the understanding of social groups.
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