| Literature DB >> 33933599 |
Yin Wang1, Athanasia Metoki2, Yunman Xia2, Yinyin Zang3, Yong He2, Ingrid R Olson4.
Abstract
Humans have a remarkable ability to infer the mind of others. This mentalizing skill relies on a distributed network of brain regions but how these regions connect and interact is not well understood. Here we leveraged large-scale multimodal neuroimaging data to elucidate the brain-wide organization and mechanisms of mentalizing processing. Key connectomic features of the mentalizing network (MTN) have been delineated in exquisite detail. We found the structural architecture of MTN is organized by two parallel subsystems and constructed redundantly by local and long-range white matter fibers. We uncovered an intrinsic functional architecture that is synchronized according to the degree of mentalizing, and its hierarchy reflects the inherent information integration order. We also examined the correspondence between the structural and functional connectivity in the network and revealed their differences in network topology, individual variance, spatial specificity, and functional specificity. Finally, we scrutinized the connectome resemblance between the default mode network and MTN and elaborated their inherent differences in dynamic patterns, laterality, and homogeneity. Overall, our study demonstrates that mentalizing processing unfolds across functionally heterogeneous regions with highly structured fiber tracts and unique hierarchical functional architecture, which make it distinguishable from the default mode network and other vicinity brain networks supporting autobiographical memory, semantic memory, self-referential, moral reasoning, and mental time travel.Entities:
Keywords: Default mode network; Functional connectivity; Mentalizing network; Social brain networks; Structural connectivity; Theory of Mind
Year: 2021 PMID: 33933599 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118115
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556