4.7 Article

Differences in working memory coding of biological motion attributed to oneself and others

期刊

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
卷 43, 期 12, 页码 3721-3734

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25879

关键词

biological motion; body representation; mirror neurons; MVPA; self-representation; self-other; working memory

资金

  1. Centre of Excellence in Cognition and its Disorders, Australian Research Council [DP160102770]
  2. FP7 Ideas: European Research Council [609819]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study investigates the neural substrates involved in distinguishing between self and others in the brain. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, the researchers identified specific brain regions that play a role in both perception of movement stimuli and self/other distinction.
The question how the brain distinguishes between information about self and others is of fundamental interest to both philosophy and neuroscience. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, we sought to distinguish the neural substrates of representing a full-body movement as one's movement and as someone else's movement. Participants performed a delayed match-to-sample working memory task where a retained full-body movement (displayed using point-light walkers) was arbitrarily labeled as one's own movement or as performed by someone else. By using arbitrary associations we aimed to address a limitation of previous studies, namely that our own movements are more familiar to us than movements of other people. A searchlight multivariate decoding analysis was used to test where information about types of movement and about self-association was coded. Movement specific activation patterns were found in a network of regions also involved in perceptual processing of movement stimuli, however not in early sensory regions. Information about whether a memorized movement was associated with the self or with another person was found to be coded by activity in the left middle frontal gyrus (MFG), left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), bilateral supplementary motor area, and (at reduced threshold) in the left temporoparietal junction (TPJ). These areas are frequently reported as involved in action understanding (IFG, MFG) and domain-general self/other distinction (TPJ). Finally, in univariate analysis we found that selecting a self-associated movement for retention was related to increased activity in the ventral medial prefrontal cortex.

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