Shapeception: Unravelling Brain Activity during Animated Shape Perception and Mentalization

In this paper, we investigate the brain activity elicited during perception of animated shapes as stimuli, which have been found to evoke mental state attributions. Contrary to a previous study, we incorporated the participants' responses in the analysis, and observed robust activations in mPFC...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Srivastava, Varad, Goel, Minaxi
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 21.11.2023
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Summary:In this paper, we investigate the brain activity elicited during perception of animated shapes as stimuli, which have been found to evoke mental state attributions. Contrary to a previous study, we incorporated the participants' responses in the analysis, and observed robust activations in mPFC, which has been found to play an important role in understanding other's and one's own nature. From our analyses, TPOj was observed showing robust activation during the task as well as functionally connected to AA and LTC, which lead to speculation that empathy might co-occur with mentalizing in the task and that humans might be able to empathize with these interacting shapes, in spite of lacking human features. Along with this, in one of our analyses, we were able to localize a region close to the pSTS, where the activation depicted the participants' 'ability to mentalize'. Based on our observations, we modelled the prediction of mentalization and propose our model as an approach towards developing a brain-activity based model to detect ToM (Theory of Mind) difficulties, which could be useful in research about disorders like Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) as well as assessment of mentalization-based treatments. Additionally, we use our findings to reiterate how the Resting State might not always act as a good control condition and that control conditions should be task-specific.
ISSN:2331-8422