Distributed and hierarchical neural encoding of multidimensional biological motion attributes in the human brain

Abstract The human visual system can efficiently extract distinct physical, biological, and social attributes (e.g. facing direction, gender, and emotional state) from biological motion (BM), but how these attributes are encoded in the brain remains largely unknown. In the current study, we used fun...

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Published inCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. 1991) Vol. 33; no. 13; pp. 8510 - 8522
Main Authors Wang, Ruidi, Lu, Xiqian, Jiang, Yi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Oxford University Press 20.06.2023
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Summary:Abstract The human visual system can efficiently extract distinct physical, biological, and social attributes (e.g. facing direction, gender, and emotional state) from biological motion (BM), but how these attributes are encoded in the brain remains largely unknown. In the current study, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to investigate this issue when participants viewed multidimensional BM stimuli. Using multiple regression representational similarity analysis, we identified distributed brain areas, respectively, related to the processing of facing direction, gender, and emotional state conveyed by BM. These brain areas are governed by a hierarchical structure in which the respective neural encoding of facing direction, gender, and emotional state is modulated by each other in descending order. We further revealed that a portion of the brain areas identified in representational similarity analysis was specific to the neural encoding of each attribute and correlated with the corresponding behavioral results. These findings unravel the brain networks for encoding BM attributes in consideration of their interactions, and highlight that the processing of multidimensional BM attributes is recurrently interactive.
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ISSN:1047-3211
1460-2199
1460-2199
DOI:10.1093/cercor/bhad136