Neuroimaging of the joint Simon effect with believed biological and non-biological co-actors

Tanya Wen, Shulan Hsieh

研究成果: Article同行評審

20 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

Performing a task alone or together with another agent can produce different outcomes. The current study used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate the neural underpinnings when participants performed a Go/Nogo task alone or complementarily with another co-actor (unseen), whom was believed to be another human or a computer. During both complementary tasks, reaction time data suggested that participants integrated the potential action of their co-actor in their own action planning. Compared to the single-actor task, increased parietal and precentral activity during complementary tasks as shown in the fMRI data further suggested representation of the co-actor’s response. The superior frontal gyrus of the medial prefrontal cortex was differentially activated in the human co-actor condition compared to the computer co-actor condition. The medial prefrontal cortex, involved thinking about the beliefs and intentions of other people, possibly reflects a social-cognitive aspect or self-other discrimination during the joint task when believing a biological co-actor is present. Our results suggest that action co-representation can occur even offline with any agent type given a priori information that they are co-acting, however, additional regions are recruited when participants believe they are task-sharing with another human.

原文English
文章編號483
頁(從 - 到)1-13
頁數13
期刊Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
9
發行號september
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 2015 9月 1

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • 神經心理學與生理心理學
  • 神經內科
  • 精神病學和心理健康
  • 生物精神病學
  • 行為神經科學

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