Neural basis of social attention: common and distinct mechanisms for social and nonsocial orienting stimuli
Date
2023Author
Narganes-Pineda, Cristina
Paz-Alonso, Pedro M.
Marotta, Andrea
Lupiáñez, Juan
Chica, Ana B.
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Cristina Narganes-Pineda, Pedro M Paz-Alonso, Andrea Marotta, Juan Lupiáñez, Ana B Chica, Neural basis of social attention: common and distinct mechanisms for social and nonsocial orienting stimuli, Cerebral Cortex, Volume 33, Issue 22, 15 November 2023, Pages 11010–11024, https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhad339
Cerebral Cortex
Cerebral Cortex
Abstract
Social and nonsocial directional stimuli (such as gaze and arrows, respectively) share their ability to trigger attentional processes, although the issue of whether social stimuli generate other additional (and unique) attentional effects is still under debate. In this study, we used the spatial interference paradigm to explore, using functional magnetic resonance imaging, shared and dissociable brain activations produced by gaze and arrows. Results showed a common set of regions (right parieto-temporo-occipital) similarly involved in conflict resolution for gaze and arrows stimuli, which showed stronger co-activation for incongruent than congruent trials. The frontal eye field showed stronger functional connectivity with occipital regions for congruent as compared with incongruent trials, and this effect was enhanced for gaze as compared with arrow stimuli in the right hemisphere. Moreover, spatial interference produced by incongruent (as compared with congruent) arrows was associated with increased functional coupling between the right frontal eye field and a set of regions in the left hemisphere. This result was not observed for incongruent (as compared with congruent) gaze stimuli. The right frontal eye field also showed greater coupling with left temporo-occipital regions for those conditions in which larger conflict was observed (arrow incongruent vs. gaze incongruent trials, and gaze congruent vs. arrow congruent trials). These findings support the view that social and nonsocial stimuli share some attentional mechanisms, while at the same time highlighting other differential effects.