The social mind
Theory of Mind develops
- 6-7 = know when someone is being ironic - 9-10 = judge mental states by examining eyes - ASD = impaired
Theory of mind - Premack & Woodruff, 1978
- Ability to reason to other peoples mental states - Cues (facial expressions, gestures etc.) can help determine a persons mental state
ASD and ToM
- Castelli et al, 2002: fMRI - Animated shapes to ASD and controls - Compared BOLD responses when shapes moved at random - ASD group = gave fewer mental state related discriptions - ASD = underactivation in all regions (MPFC, TPJ, STS) - ASD = no trouble perceiving the stimulus = association and interpreting their meaning was impaired
Typical development of theory of mind
- Children have innate preferences for social stimuli - Batki et al (2000) = babies prefered to look at human face rather than non-social objects - especially if eyes were open - Grossman et al (2007) = enhanced ERPs in occipital face processing areas for direct eye contact compared to averted gaze - Joint attention
Modularity theory (Leslie et al, 2004)
- Innate mechanisms which allow us to reason with mental states - Present at birth but develops over time - Innate ability to see where everyone else is looking = important for lang and development - Evidence = children preference for social stimuli - Consistent with Baron-Cohen Eye direction director hypothesis
Temporoparietal junction (TPJ)
- Involved in reasoning with others and their mental states - right TPJ important - Role of shifting attention in ToM - Saxe & Kanwisher (2003) - specificity > Compared activity in TPJ with extrastraite body areas (EBA: responds to perceptions of bodies) > Task 1 was looking at pictures of bodies, task 2 was think of mental states of those people in the photos > Task 1 = acitvated EBA and not TPJ > Task 2 = ToM tasks = activated TPJ
Joint Attention (Buttersworth & Jarrett, 1991)
- Looking and attending the same with - Sharing attention with another - 12-18 months developed - Important - Delay (e.g. blind parents) - if do not learn = impacts lang and social - Use point cues = related to social and lang development - Children with ASD = trouble with joint attention
Social interactions in ASD
- Not maintain eye contact - Not form age appropriate relations - Not use age appropriate gestures - Not share social experiences and joint attention - Not respond to name - Not respond appropriately to other's emotion states - Lack of social and make believe play
Austim Spectrum Disorder (ASD)
- Problems with social interactions - DSM-V = problems with social interactions, social reciprocity, communication and repetitive behaviours - Doesn't relate to IQ - 40% of autistic people have above average IQs - 1% of people - traditionally was males, but changing - females react differently to males - Life long neurodevelopment condition - Problems understanding how others think and feel - Condition rather than disorder = less stigmatizing
Superior temporal sulcus (STS)
- Role in detecting biological motion (e.g. eye gaze) with mental states - Thinking of what you want to act upon - Insight on their mental states - Look at object you expect others to look at - Pelphrey et al, 2003; 2006 = rSTS more strongly activated when gaze violated expectations - Pelphrey et al, 2004: direct gaze = actived rSTS even more than averted gaze
Neural bases of ToM
- Several brain regions critical in mental state attribution - Temporopariental Junction - Superior temporal sulcus = don't talk to each other much - Medial PFC > Ventral PFC > Dorsal PFC = Activated when reasoning of other mental states - Phineas gage = damage to MPFC = bad personality after injury
mPFC (medial prefrontal cortex)
- Ventral and dorsal PFC = activated when reasoning about other persons state Neuroimaging evidence: - Mitchell et al, 2004 = ppts shown images of others and shown info of that person. Asked to make impression of that person or recall what order info was presented > Mental state task = higher activation of medial PFC - Mitchell et al, 2006 = (specificity) read descriptions of people of people with similar political views and dissimilar political views to themselves > Similar views = ventral PFC > Dissimilar views = dorsal PFC - stimulating other mental states
Stimulation theory (Harris, 1992)
- We learn to do - Putting ourselves into someone else's "mental shoes" - Imagining what it would be like to be them - key to mental states - Consistent with imaginative abilities developing alongside ToM abilities