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Processing communicative facial and vocal cues in the superior temporal sulcus.
Deen, Ben; Saxe, Rebecca; Kanwisher, Nancy.
Afiliação
  • Deen B; Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States; Laboratory of Neural Systems, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, United States. Electronic address: benjamin.deen@gmail.com.
  • Saxe R; Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States.
  • Kanwisher N; Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, United States.
Neuroimage ; 221: 117191, 2020 11 01.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32711066
Facial and vocal cues provide critical social information about other humans, including their emotional and attentional states and the content of their speech. Recent work has shown that the face-responsive region of posterior superior temporal sulcus ("fSTS") also responds strongly to vocal sounds. Here, we investigate the functional role of this region and the broader STS by measuring responses to a range of face movements, vocal sounds, and hand movements using fMRI. We find that the fSTS responds broadly to different types of audio and visual face action, including both richly social communicative actions, as well as minimally social noncommunicative actions, ruling out hypotheses of specialization for processing speech signals, or communicative signals more generally. Strikingly, however, responses to hand movements were very low, whether communicative or not, indicating a specific role in the analysis of face actions (facial and vocal), not a general role in the perception of any human action. Furthermore, spatial patterns of response in this region were able to decode communicative from noncommunicative face actions, both within and across modality (facial/vocal cues), indicating sensitivity to an abstract social dimension. These functional properties of the fSTS contrast with a region of middle STS that has a selective, largely unimodal auditory response to speech sounds over both communicative and noncommunicative vocal nonspeech sounds, and nonvocal sounds. Region of interest analyses were corroborated by a data-driven independent component analysis, identifying face-voice and auditory speech responses as dominant sources of voxelwise variance across the STS. These results suggest that the STS contains separate processing streams for the audiovisual analysis of face actions and auditory speech processing.
Assuntos

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Percepção Auditiva / Percepção Social / Lobo Temporal / Mapeamento Encefálico / Sinais (Psicologia) / Expressão Facial / Reconhecimento Facial / Comunicação não Verbal Limite: Adolescent / Adult / Humans Idioma: En Revista: Neuroimage Assunto da revista: DIAGNOSTICO POR IMAGEM Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Percepção Auditiva / Percepção Social / Lobo Temporal / Mapeamento Encefálico / Sinais (Psicologia) / Expressão Facial / Reconhecimento Facial / Comunicação não Verbal Limite: Adolescent / Adult / Humans Idioma: En Revista: Neuroimage Assunto da revista: DIAGNOSTICO POR IMAGEM Ano de publicação: 2020 Tipo de documento: Article