| Literature DB >> 27649972 |
Michiel van Elk1, Monique Duizer2, Ilja Sligte2, Hein van Schie3.
Abstract
Given the current debates about the precise functional role of the right temporoparietal junction (rTPJ) in egocentric and exocentric perspective taking, in the present study we manipulated activity in the rTPJ to investigate the effects on a spatial perspective-taking task. Participants engaged in a mental body transformation task, requiring them to mentally rotate their own body to the position of an avatar, while undergoing anodal, cathodal, or sham transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) of the rTPJ. As a control task, participants judged the laterality of a stimulus feature with respect to a fixation cross on the screen. For the first half of the experiment (only during online tDCS), a task-selective effect of tDCS was observed, reflected in slower reaction times following anodal than following cathodal and sham tDCS for the mental body transformation task, but not for the control task. The effects of tDCS were most pronounced for stimuli implying a more difficult mental body transformation. No effects of tDCS were observed during the second half of the experiment. The effects of tDCS were most pronounced for participants scoring low on aberrant perceptual beliefs and spiritual transcendence, suggesting a relation between third-person perspective taking and bodily and perceptual experiences. The finding that anodal stimulation of the rTPJ impairs third-person perspective taking indicates a key role of this region in exocentric spatial processing.Entities:
Keywords: Mental body transformation task; Right temporoparietal junction; Spatial perspective taking; Transcranial direct current stimulation
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27649972 PMCID: PMC5272883 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-016-0462-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1530-7026 Impact factor: 3.282
Fig. 1Stimuli used in the experimental task. Participants were presented with an on-screen avatar that was rotated along different rotation axes (z-, x-, and y-axes) and at different rotation angles (60°, 120°, –60°, –120°, 180°). Participants were instructed to indicate the position of the bracelet either with respect to the perspective of the avatar (i.e., mental body transformation task) or with respect to the fixation cross, as seen from their own perspective (i.e., control task).
Analysis of variance for the reaction time data from the MBT task
| Effect |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Block | 1,41 | 24.42 | 4,445,002.0 | .000 | .37 |
| Task | 1,41 | 93.60 | 125,704,133 | .000 | .70 |
| Axis | 2,82 | 89.86 | 4,323,736.9 | .000 | .69 |
| Angle | 2,82 | 56.46 | 2,280,597.1 | .000 | .58 |
| Block × Task | 1, 41 | 16.00 | 2,086,636.5 | .000 | .28 |
| Block × Task × Condition | 2, 41 | 6.00 | 781,030.6 | .005 | .23 |
| Block × Axis | 2, 82 | 8.31 | 95,376.4 | .001 | .17 |
| Task × Axis | 2, 82 | 72.04 | 3,811,376.1 | .000 | .64 |
| Block × Task × Axis | 2, 82 | 5.94 | 56,427.9 | .004 | .13 |
| Task × Angle | 2, 82 | 69.55 | 2,622,869.2 | .000 | .63 |
| Block × Task × Angle | 2, 82 | 3.56 | 44,266.0 | .033 | .08 |
| Block × Task × Angle × Condition | 4, 82 | 2.80 | 34,821.8 | .031 | .12 |
| Axis × Angle | 4, 164 | 3.65 | 76,335.0 | .007 | .08 |
| Task × Axis × Angle | 4, 164 | 9.28 | 175,064.4 | .000 | .19 |
Fig. 2Reaction times during the first half of the experimental task (upper panel) and the second half of the experimental task (lower panel), as a function of rotation angle and task (gray lines = control task; black lines = mental body transformation [MBT] task). Graphs on the left represent the anodal tDCS condition, middle graphs the cathodal tDCS condition, and right graphs the sham condition. The upper row represents reaction times to stimuli rotated along the z-axis, the middle row those to stimuli rotated along the x-axis, and the lower row stimuli rotated along the y-axis. Error bars represent standard errors.
Analysis of variance for the data from the first half of the experiment (during tDCS)
| Effect |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Task | 1, 42 | 77.75 | 88,224,938.0 | .000 | .65 |
| Axis | 2, 84 | 81.07 | 3,176,624.1 | .000 | .66 |
| Angle | 2, 84 | 54.24 | 1,603,850.1 | .000 | .56 |
| Task × Axis | 2, 84 | 72.94 | 2,601,276.6 | .000 | .635 |
| Task × Angle | 2, 84 | 66.70 | 1,861,884.9 | .000 | .614 |
| Axis × Angle | 4, 168 | 2.95 | 81,281.7 | .022 | .066 |
| Task × Axis × Angle | 4, 168 | 7.35 | 163,777.8 | .000 | .15 |
| Task × Condition | 2, 42 | 3.05 | 3,457,915.9 | .058 | .13 |
| Axis × Condition | 4, 84 | 2.46 | 96,179.22 | .052 | .11 |
| Angle × Condition | 4, 84 | 3.12 | 92,320.6 | .019 | .13 |
| Task × Axis × Condition | 4, 84 | 2.75 | 98,019.1 | .033 | .12 |
| Task × Angle × Condition | 4, 84 | 4.12 | 114,964.6 | .004 | .16 |
Reaction times for the mental body transformation task as a function of condition (anodal, cathodal, or sham stimulation) and rotation angle (60°, 120°, 180°), and according to whether participants scored below (left side of table) or above (right side of table) the median on the Launay–Slade hallucination scale (LSHS) and the spiritual transcendence scale (STS)
| Rotation Angle | Rotation Angle | |||||
| Condition | 60° | 120° | 180° | 60° | 120° | 180° |
| LSHS Low | LSHS High | |||||
| Anodal |
|
|
| 1,209 (187) | 1,397 (227) | 1,586 (239) |
| Cathodal | 994 (187) | 1,087 (227) | 1,237 (239) | 1,199 (175) | 1,377 (212) | 1,453 (224) |
| Sham | 1,110 (175) | 1,262 (212) | 1,389 (224) | 855 (202) | 955 (245) | 1,027 (259) |
| STS Low | STS High | |||||
| Anodal |
|
|
| 1,365 (198) | 1,544 (237) | 1,757 (255) |
| Cathodal | 1,103 (185) | 1,300 (221) | 1,354 (239) | 1,104 (192) | 1,176 (233) | 1,351 (248) |
| Sham | 938 (208) | 1,061 (251) | 1,170 (268) | 1,047 (180) | 1,183 (218) | 1,282 (232) |
Standard errors are presented between parentheses. The most relevant findings that are referred to in the Results section are in bold.