Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.

We asked participants to predict which of two colors a similar other (student) and a dissimilar other (retiree) likes better. We manipulated if color-pairs were two hues from the same color-category (e.g. green) or two conceptually different colors (e.g. green versus blue). In the former case, the m...

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Main Authors: Matthias Schurz, Christoph Kogler, Thomas Scherndl, Martin Kronbichler, Anton Kühberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121405
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spelling doaj-64f97a3856714710b8ef07062159c8f42021-03-04T12:34:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-01103e012140510.1371/journal.pone.0121405Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.Matthias SchurzChristoph KoglerThomas ScherndlMartin KronbichlerAnton KühbergerWe asked participants to predict which of two colors a similar other (student) and a dissimilar other (retiree) likes better. We manipulated if color-pairs were two hues from the same color-category (e.g. green) or two conceptually different colors (e.g. green versus blue). In the former case, the mental state that has to be represented (i.e., the percept of two different hues of green) is predominantly non-conceptual or phenomenal in nature, which should promote mental simulation as a strategy for mentalizing. In the latter case, the mental state (i.e. the percept of green versus blue) can be captured in thought by concepts, which facilitates the use of theories for mentalizing. In line with the self-projection hypothesis, we found that cortical midline areas including vmPFC / orbitofrontal cortex and precuneus were preferentially activated for mentalizing about a similar other. However, activation was not affected by the nature of the color-difference, suggesting that self-projection subsumes simulation-like processes but is not limited to them. This indicates that self-projection is a universal strategy applied in different contexts--irrespective of the availability of theories for mentalizing. Along with midline activations linked to self-projection, we also observed activation in right lateral frontal and dorsal parietal areas showing a theory-like pattern. Taken together, this shows that mentalizing does not operate based on simulation or theory, but that both strategies are used concurrently to predict the choices of others.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121405
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthias Schurz
Christoph Kogler
Thomas Scherndl
Martin Kronbichler
Anton Kühberger
spellingShingle Matthias Schurz
Christoph Kogler
Thomas Scherndl
Martin Kronbichler
Anton Kühberger
Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Matthias Schurz
Christoph Kogler
Thomas Scherndl
Martin Kronbichler
Anton Kühberger
author_sort Matthias Schurz
title Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
title_short Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
title_full Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
title_fullStr Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
title_full_unstemmed Differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fMRI.
title_sort differentiating self-projection from simulation during mentalizing: evidence from fmri.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2015-01-01
description We asked participants to predict which of two colors a similar other (student) and a dissimilar other (retiree) likes better. We manipulated if color-pairs were two hues from the same color-category (e.g. green) or two conceptually different colors (e.g. green versus blue). In the former case, the mental state that has to be represented (i.e., the percept of two different hues of green) is predominantly non-conceptual or phenomenal in nature, which should promote mental simulation as a strategy for mentalizing. In the latter case, the mental state (i.e. the percept of green versus blue) can be captured in thought by concepts, which facilitates the use of theories for mentalizing. In line with the self-projection hypothesis, we found that cortical midline areas including vmPFC / orbitofrontal cortex and precuneus were preferentially activated for mentalizing about a similar other. However, activation was not affected by the nature of the color-difference, suggesting that self-projection subsumes simulation-like processes but is not limited to them. This indicates that self-projection is a universal strategy applied in different contexts--irrespective of the availability of theories for mentalizing. Along with midline activations linked to self-projection, we also observed activation in right lateral frontal and dorsal parietal areas showing a theory-like pattern. Taken together, this shows that mentalizing does not operate based on simulation or theory, but that both strategies are used concurrently to predict the choices of others.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0121405
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