6 results on '"Arioli M."'
Search Results
2. Social perception in deaf individuals: A meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies.
- Author
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Arioli M, Segatta C, Papagno C, Tettamanti M, and Cattaneo Z
- Subjects
- Humans, Visual Perception, Hearing, Neuroimaging, Social Perception, Deafness diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Deaf individuals may report difficulties in social interactions. However, whether these difficulties depend on deafness affecting social brain circuits is controversial. Here, we report the first meta-analysis comparing brain activations of hearing and (prelingually) deaf individuals during social perception. Our findings showed that deafness does not impact on the functional mechanisms supporting social perception. Indeed, both deaf and hearing control participants recruited regions of the action observation network during performance of different social tasks employing visual stimuli, and including biological motion perception, face identification, action observation, viewing, identification and memory for signs and lip reading. Moreover, we found increased recruitment of the superior-middle temporal cortex in deaf individuals compared with hearing participants, suggesting a preserved and augmented function during social communication based on signs and lip movements. Overall, our meta-analysis suggests that social difficulties experienced by deaf individuals are unlikely to be associated with brain alterations but may rather depend on non-supportive environments., (© 2023 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Overlapping and specific neural correlates for empathizing, affective mentalizing, and cognitive mentalizing: A coordinate-based meta-analytic study.
- Author
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Arioli M, Cattaneo Z, Ricciardi E, and Canessa N
- Subjects
- Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Humans, Schizophrenia diagnostic imaging, Affect physiology, Autism Spectrum Disorder physiopathology, Brain Mapping, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Empathy physiology, Mentalization physiology, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Social Perception, Theory of Mind physiology
- Abstract
While the discussion on the foundations of social understanding mainly revolves around the notions of empathy, affective mentalizing, and cognitive mentalizing, their degree of overlap versus specificity is still unclear. We took a meta-analytic approach to unveil the neural bases of cognitive mentalizing, affective mentalizing, and empathy, both in healthy individuals and pathological conditions characterized by social deficits such as schizophrenia and autism. We observed partially overlapping networks for cognitive and affective mentalizing in the medial prefrontal, posterior cingulate, and lateral temporal cortex, while empathy mainly engaged fronto-insular, somatosensory, and anterior cingulate cortex. Adjacent process-specific regions in the posterior lateral temporal, ventrolateral, and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex might underpin a transition from abstract representations of cognitive mental states detached from sensory facets to emotionally-charged representations of affective mental states. Altered mentalizing-related activity involved distinct sectors of the posterior lateral temporal cortex in schizophrenia and autism, while only the latter group displayed abnormal empathy related activity in the amygdala. These data might inform the design of rehabilitative treatments for social cognitive deficits., (© 2021 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Social cognition in the blind brain: A coordinate-based meta-analysis.
- Author
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Arioli M, Ricciardi E, and Cattaneo Z
- Subjects
- Blindness diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Humans, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Auditory Perception physiology, Blindness physiopathology, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Functional Laterality physiology, Functional Neuroimaging, Nerve Net physiopathology, Social Cognition, Touch Perception physiology
- Abstract
Social cognition skills are typically acquired on the basis of visual information (e.g., the observation of gaze, facial expressions, gestures). In light of this, a critical issue is whether and how the lack of visual experience affects neurocognitive mechanisms underlying social skills. This issue has been largely neglected in the literature on blindness, despite difficulties in social interactions may be particular salient in the life of blind individuals (especially children). Here we provide a meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies reporting brain activations associated to the representation of self and others' in early blind individuals and in sighted controls. Our results indicate that early blindness does not critically impact on the development of the "social brain," with social tasks performed on the basis of auditory or tactile information driving consistent activations in nodes of the action observation network, typically active during actual observation of others in sighted individuals. Interestingly though, activations along this network appeared more left-lateralized in the blind than in sighted participants. These results may have important implications for the development of specific training programs to improve social skills in blind children and young adults., (© 2020 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Neural processing of social interaction: Coordinate-based meta-analytic evidence from human neuroimaging studies.
- Author
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Arioli M and Canessa N
- Subjects
- Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Humans, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Amygdala physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Functional Neuroimaging, Interpersonal Relations, Mentalization physiology, Nerve Net physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Social Perception, Theory of Mind physiology
- Abstract
While the action observation and mentalizing networks are considered to play complementary roles in understanding others' goals and intentions, they might be concurrently engaged when processing social interactions. We assessed this hypothesis via three activation-likelihood-estimation meta-analyses of neuroimaging studies on the neural processing of: (a) social interactions, (b) individual actions by the action observation network, and (c) mental states by the mentalizing network. Conjunction analyses and direct comparisons unveiled overlapping and specific regions among the resulting maps. We report quantitative meta-analytic evidence for a "social interaction network" including key nodes of the action observation and mentalizing networks. An action-social interaction-mentalizing gradient of activity along the posterior temporal cortex highlighted a hierarchical processing of interactions, from visuomotor analyses decoding individual and shared intentions to in-depth inferences on actors' intentional states. The medial prefrontal cortex, possibly in conjunction with the amygdala, might provide additional information concerning the affective valence of the interaction. This evidence suggests that the functional architecture underlying the neural processing of interactions involves the joint involvement of the action observation and mentalizing networks. These data might inform the design of rehabilitative treatments for social cognition disorders in pathological conditions, and the assessment of their outcome in randomized controlled trials., (© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Affective and cooperative social interactions modulate effective connectivity within and between the mirror and mentalizing systems.
- Author
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Arioli M, Perani D, Cappa S, Proverbio AM, Zani A, Falini A, and Canessa N
- Subjects
- Adult, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mirror Neurons physiology, Models, Neurological, Neural Pathways diagnostic imaging, Neural Pathways physiology, Theory of Mind physiology, Brain physiology, Cooperative Behavior, Emotions physiology, Social Perception
- Abstract
Decoding the meaning of others' actions, a crucial step for social cognition, involves different neural mechanisms. While the "mirror" and "mentalizing" systems have been associated with, respectively, the processing of biological actions versus more abstract information, their respective contribution to intention understanding is debated. Processing social interactions seems to recruit both neural systems, with a different weight depending on cues emphasizing either shared action goals or shared mental states. We have previously shown that observing cooperative and affective social interactions elicits stronger activity in key nodes of, respectively, the mirror (left posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS), superior parietal cortex (SPL), and ventral/dorsal premotor cortex (vPMC/dPMC)) and mentalizing (ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC)) systems. To unveil their causal organization, we investigated the effective connectivity underlying the observation of human social interactions expressing increasing cooperativity (involving left pSTS, SPL, and vPMC) versus affectivity (vmPFC) via dynamic causal modeling in 36 healthy human subjects. We found strong evidence for a model including the pSTS and vPMC as input nodes for the observed interactions. The extrinsic connectivity of this model undergoes oppositely valenced modulations, with cooperativity promoting positive modulations of connectivity between pSTS and both SPL (forward) and vPMC (mainly backward), and affectivity promoting reciprocal positive modulations of connectivity between pSTS and vmPFC (mainly backward). Alongside fMRI data, such divergent effective connectivity suggests that different dimensions underlying the processing of social interactions recruit distinct, although strongly interconnected, neural pathways associated with, respectively, the bottom-up visuomotor processing of motor intentions, and the top-down attribution of affective/mental states., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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