背前扣带皮层是否在预期违反导致的社会排斥反应中激活?功能磁共振成像研究。

Frontiers in evolutionary neuroscience Pub Date : 2012-07-27 eCollection Date: 2012-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnevo.2012.00011
Taishi Kawamoto, Keiichi Onoda, Ken'ichiro Nakashima, Hiroshi Nittono, Shuhei Yamaguchi, Mitsuhiro Ura
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引用次数: 80

摘要

人们通常对被他人接受或排斥非常敏感。以前的研究表明,背前扣带皮层(dACC)是一个关键的大脑区域参与检测社会排斥。然而,这个区域也被证明对非社会期望的违反很敏感。我们常常期望他人遵循不成文的规则,按照自己的期望来包容我们,因此,社会排斥可能会在某种程度上违反预期。目前的事件相关功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究试图将期望违反的影响与社会排斥的影响分离开来,因此我们采用了“过度包容”条件,即玩家意外地被其他玩家过度包容在游戏中。通过这种修饰,我们发现dACC和右腹外侧前额叶皮层(rVLPFC)被排斥激活,相对于过度包涵。此外,我们发现排他性诱发的大脑活动与rVLPFC的自评社交疼痛之间存在负相关,但在dACC中没有。这些发现表明,rVLPFC对调节社交疼痛至关重要,而dACC在检测排斥方面发挥重要作用。社会排斥的神经生物学基础不同于单纯的期望违反。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Is dorsal anterior cingulate cortex activation in response to social exclusion due to expectancy violation? An fMRI study.

Is dorsal anterior cingulate cortex activation in response to social exclusion due to expectancy violation? An fMRI study.

Is dorsal anterior cingulate cortex activation in response to social exclusion due to expectancy violation? An fMRI study.

Is dorsal anterior cingulate cortex activation in response to social exclusion due to expectancy violation? An fMRI study.

People are typically quite sensitive about being accepted or excluded by others. Previous studies have suggested that the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) is a key brain region involved in the detection of social exclusion. However, this region has also been shown to be sensitive to non-social expectancy violations. We often expect other people to follow an unwritten rule in which they include us as they would expect to be included, such that social exclusion likely involves some degree of expectancy violation. The present event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study sought to separate the effects of expectancy violation from those of social exclusion, such that we employed an "overinclusion" condition in which a player was unexpectedly overincluded in the game by the other players. With this modification, we found that the dACC and right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (rVLPFC) were activated by exclusion, relative to overinclusion. In addition, we identified a negative correlation between exclusion-evoked brain activity and self-rated social pain in the rVLPFC, but not in the dACC. These findings suggest that the rVLPFC is critical for regulating social pain, whereas the dACC plays an important role in the detection of exclusion. The neurobiological basis of social exclusion is different from that of mere expectancy violation.

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