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Constructing others’ beliefs from one’s own using medial frontal cortex

Authors :
Nils Kolling
Ivan Toni
Marius Braunsdorf
Rogier B. Mars
Harold Bekkering
Suhas Vijayakumar
Source :
The Journal of Neuroscience, 41, 46, pp. 9571-9580, The Journal of Neuroscience, The Journal of Neuroscience, 41, 9571-9580
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Society for Neuroscience, 2021.

Abstract

Many daily choices are based on one's own knowledge. However, when predicting other people's behavior, we need to consider the differences between our knowledge and other people's presumed knowledge. Social agents need a mechanism to use privileged information for their own behavior but exclude it from predictions of others. Using fMRI, we investigated the neural implementation of such social and personal predictions in healthy human volunteers of both sexes by manipulating privileged and shared information. The medial frontal cortex appeared to have an important role in flexibly making decisions using privileged information for oneself or predicting others' behavior. Specifically, we show that ventromedial PFC tracked the state of the world independent of the type of decision (personal, social), whereas dorsomedial regions adjusted their frame of reference to the use of privileged or shared information. Sampling privileged evidence not available to another person also relied on specific interactions between temporoparietal junction area and frontal pole.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTWhat we know about the minds of others and how we use that information is crucial to understanding social interaction. Mentalizing, or reading the minds of others, is argued to be particularly well developed in the human and crucially affected in some disorders. However, the intractable nature of human interactions makes it very difficult to study these processes. Here, we present a way to objectively quantify the information people have about others and to investigate how their brain deals with this information. This shows that people use similar areas in the brain related to nonsocial decision-making when making decisions in social situations and modify this information processing by the knowledge about others use these to modify their information processing according to the knowledge of others.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02706474
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Neuroscience, 41, 46, pp. 9571-9580, The Journal of Neuroscience, The Journal of Neuroscience, 41, 9571-9580
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4c44ac26265c6e56da1fa4ad12112d78