Person perception involves functional integration between the extrastriate body area and temporal pole

Open access
Date
2017-02Type
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliography
no
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Abstract
The majority of human neuroscience research has focussed on understanding functional organisation within segregated patches of cortex. The ventral visual stream has been associated with the detection of physical features such as faces and body parts, whereas the theory-of-mind network has been associated with making inferences about mental states and underlying character, such as whether someone is friendly, selfish, or generous. To date, however, it is largely unknown how such distinct processing components integrate neural signals. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and connectivity analyses, we investigated the contribution of functional integration to social perception. During scanning, participants observed bodies that had previously been associated with trait-based or neutral information. Additionally, we independently localised the body perception and theory-of-mind networks. We demonstrate that when observing someone who cues the recall of stored social knowledge compared to non-social knowledge, a node in the ventral visual stream (extrastriate body area) shows greater coupling with part of the theory-of-mind network (temporal pole). These results show that functional connections provide an interface between perceptual and inferential processing components, thus providing neurobiological evidence that supports the view that understanding the visual environment involves interplay between conceptual knowledge and perceptual processing. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000628417Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
NeuropsychologiaVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Body perception; Theory of mind; Functional connectivityOrganisational unit
09800 - Cross, Emily S. / Cross, Emily S.
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ETH Bibliography
no
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