Intracranial EEG;
Time -frequency analysis;
Broadband gamma;
Perspective;
-taking;
Self;
-perspective;
Hierarchical theory of processing;
OF-BODY EXPERIENCE;
TEMPOROPARIETAL JUNCTION;
SELF;
OWN;
INHIBITION;
IMPAIRMENT;
ABILITIES;
PRECUNEUS;
COGNITION;
NETWORKS;
D O I:
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120487
中图分类号:
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号:
071006 ;
摘要:
Visuospatial perspective-taking (VPT) is the ability to imagine a scene from a position different from the one used in self-perspective judgments (SPJ). We typically use VPT to understand how others see the environment. VPT requires overcoming the self-perspective, and impairments in this process are implicated in various brain dis-orders, such as schizophrenia and autism. However, the underlying brain areas of VPT are not well distinguished from SPJ-related ones and from domain-general responses to both perspectives. In addition, hierarchical pro-cessing theory suggests that domain-specific processes emerge over time from domain-general ones. It mainly focuses on the sensory system, but outside of it, support for this hypothesis is lacking. Therefore, we aimed to spatiotemporally distinguish brain responses domain-specific to VPT from the specific ones to self-perspective, and domain-general responses to both perspectives. In particular, we intended to test whether VPT-and SPJ specific responses begin later than the general ones. We recorded intracranial EEG data from 30 patients with epilepsy who performed a task requiring laterality judgments during VPT and SPJ, and analyzed the spatio-temporal features of responses in the broad gamma band (50-150 Hz). We found VPT-specific processing in a more extensive brain network than SPJ-specific processing. Their dynamics were similar, but both differed from the general responses, which began earlier and lasted longer. Our results anatomically distinguish VPT-specific from SPJ-specific processing. Furthermore, we temporally differentiate between domain-specific and domain -general processes both inside and outside the sensory system, which serves as a novel example of hierarchical processing.