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引用次数: 0
摘要
在人类和非人类灵长类动物的枕颞皮层中都发现了区分身体与非身体刺激的神经活动。然而,对同一物种不同个体身体的相似性进行编码以支持其分类表征的神经机制仍不清楚。我们利用脑电图(EEG)和脑磁图(MEG),通过量化神经对人类和动物(黑猩猩、狗和鸟类)不同姿态身体轮廓的重复抑制,研究了同一物种不同个体身体轮廓所共有的神经过程的时间和空间特征。我们的脑电图结果显示,在对同一物种的动物(而非人类)身体轮廓做出反应时,180-220 毫秒(P2)处的额叶/中枢早期活动和 220-320 毫秒(P270)处的枕顶叶晚期活动的振幅会受到明显的重复抑制。我们的 MEG 结果进一步将与动物身体轮廓有关的重复抑制效应定位在刺激开始后 200-440 毫秒的左侧边际上回和左侧额叶皮层。我们的研究结果表明,有两个神经过程参与了动物身体轮廓的自发分类表征,这是人兽互动的认知基础。
Neural Basis of Categorical Representations of Animal Body Silhouettes.
Neural activities differentiating bodies versus non-body stimuli have been identified in the occipitotemporal cortex of both humans and nonhuman primates. However, the neural mechanisms of coding the similarity of different individuals' bodies of the same species to support their categorical representations remain unclear. Using electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG), we investigated the temporal and spatial characteristics of neural processes shared by different individual body silhouettes of the same species by quantifying the repetition suppression of neural responses to human and animal (chimpanzee, dog, and bird) body silhouettes showing different postures. Our EEG results revealed significant repetition suppression of the amplitudes of early frontal/central activity at 180-220 ms (P2) and late occipitoparietal activity at 220-320 ms (P270) in response to animal (but not human) body silhouettes of the same species. Our MEG results further localized the repetition suppression effect related to animal body silhouettes in the left supramarginal gyrus and left frontal cortex at 200-440 ms after stimulus onset. Our findings suggest two neural processes that are involved in spontaneous categorical representations of animal body silhouettes as a cognitive basis of human-animal interactions.
期刊介绍:
Neuroscience Bulletin (NB), the official journal of the Chinese Neuroscience Society, is published monthly by Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences (SIBS), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and Springer.
NB aims to publish research advances in the field of neuroscience and promote exchange of scientific ideas within the community. The journal publishes original papers on various topics in neuroscience and focuses on potential disease implications on the nervous system. NB welcomes research contributions on molecular, cellular, or developmental neuroscience using multidisciplinary approaches and functional strategies. We feature full-length original articles, reviews, methods, letters to the editor, insights, and research highlights. As the official journal of the Chinese Neuroscience Society, which currently has more than 12,000 members in China, NB is devoted to facilitating communications between Chinese neuroscientists and their international colleagues. The journal is recognized as the most influential publication in neuroscience research in China.