Common and distinct neural correlates of social interaction perception and theory of mind

Kavli Affiliate: Martin Lindquist

| Authors: Zizhuang Miao, Heejung Jung, Philip A. Kragel, Ke Bo, Patrick Sadil, Martin A. Lindquist and Tor D. Wager

| Summary:

Social interaction perception and theory of mind (ToM) frequently co-occur, but their commonalities and distinctions at behavioral and neural levels remain unclear. Participants (N = 231) provided moment-by-moment ratings of four text and four audio narratives on social interactions and ToM engagement, which were reliable (split-half r = .98 and .92, respectively) but only modestly correlated (r = .32). In a second sample (N = 90), we analyzed the co-variation between social interaction and ToM ratings and fMRI activity during text and audio narratives. Social interaction and ToM activity maps generalized across modalities (spatial r = .83 and .57, respectively), both with significant, overlapping clusters in canonical mentalizing regions (FDR q < .01). ToM uniquely engaged the lateral occipitotemporal cortex, left anterior intraparietal sulcus, and right premotor cortex. These results suggest that perceiving social interactions automatically involves mentalizing, and ToM additionally engages brain regions for action understanding and executive functions.

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