People thinking about thinking people The role of the temporo-parietal junction in “theory of mind”
@article{Saxe2003PeopleTA, title={People thinking about thinking people The role of the temporo-parietal junction in “theory of mind”}, author={Rebecca Saxe and Nancy G. Kanwisher}, journal={NeuroImage}, year={2003}, volume={19}, pages={1835-1842} }
1,915 Citations
Making sense of another mind: The role of the right temporo-parietal junction
- Psychology, BiologyNeuropsychologia
- 2005
Thinking about seeing: Perceptual sources of knowledge are encoded in the theory of mind brain regions of sighted and blind adults
- Psychology, BiologyCognition
- 2014
It's the Thought That Counts
- Psychology, BiologyPsychological science
- 2006
Investigation of the substrate of the late-developing process in adult brains found three regions responded selectively when subjects read about a protagonist's thoughts, but not when they read about other subjective, internal states or other socially relevant information about a person.
Activity in right temporo-parietal junction is not selective for theory-of-mind.
- Psychology, BiologyCerebral cortex
- 2008
Functional neuroimaging was used to examine the extent to which cortical loci identified by a "theory-of-mind localizer" also distinguish between trials on a target detection task that varied demands to reorient attention, and results were incompatible with claims of RTPJ selectivity for mental state attribution.
Theory of mind performance in children correlates with functional specialization of a brain region for thinking about thoughts.
- Psychology, BiologyChild development
- 2012
Between ages 5 and 11 years, responses in the bilateral TPJ became increasingly specific to stories describing mental states as opposed to people's appearance and social relationships, and how behavioral and neural changes can be related in development is provided.
The Role of the Theory-of-Mind Cortical Network in the Comprehension of Narratives
- Biology, PsychologyLang. Linguistics Compass
- 2009
It is proposed that narrative comprehension makes use of some of the neural substrate of Theory of Mind reasoning, evoking what is referred to as a protagonist perspective network, and how the interaction between the two centers is disrupted in individuals with autism.
Growing up blind does not change the neural bases of Theory of Mind
- PsychologyProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- 2009
It is found that ToM brain regions of sighted and congenitally blind adults are similarly localized and functionally specific, and the development of neural mechanisms for ToM depends on innate factors and on experiences represented at an abstract level, amodally.
Minds, persons, and space: An fMRI investigation into the relational complexity of higher-order intentionality
- Psychology, BiologyConsciousness and Cognition
- 2008
An fMRI Investigation of Spontaneous Mental State Inference for Moral Judgment
- Psychology, BiologyJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- 2009
The results illuminate two aspects of theory of mind in moral judgment: (1) spontaneous belief inference and (2) stimulus-driven belief integration.
Two Takes on the Social Brain: A Comparison of Theory of Mind Tasks
- Biology, PsychologyJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- 2007
We compared two tasks that are widely used in research on mentalizingfalse belief stories and animations of rigid geometric shapes that depict social interactionsto investigate whether the neural…
References
SHOWING 1-10 OF 31 REFERENCES
Other minds in the brain: a functional imaging study of “theory of mind” in story comprehension
- Psychology, BiologyCognition
- 1995
Interacting minds--a biological basis.
- Psychology, BiologyScience
- 1999
Observations suggest that the ability to mentalize has evolved from a system for representing actions, and medial prefrontal regions are concerned with explicit representation of states of the self.
Mind Reading: Neural Mechanisms of Theory of Mind and Self-Perspective
- Psychology, BiologyNeuroImage
- 2001
Divergent neural activations in response to TOM and SELF suggest that these important differential mental capacities of human self-consciousness are implemented at least in part in distinct brain regions.
What Does the Frontomedian Cortex Contribute to Language Processing: Coherence or Theory of Mind?
- PsychologyNeuroImage
- 2002
The results clearly show that the FMC plays a role in coherence processes even in the absence of concomitant ToM processes, and support the view of this cortex having a domain-independent functionality related to volitional aspects of the initiation and maintenance of nonautomatic cognitive processes.
A PET Investigation of the Attribution of Intentions with a Nonverbal Task
- PsychologyNeuroImage
- 2000
The data suggest that attribution of intentions to others is associated with a complex cerebral activity involving the right medial prefrontal cortex when a nonverbal task is used.
Reading the mind in cartoons and stories: an fMRI study of ‘theory of mind’ in verbal and nonverbal tasks
- Psychology, BiologyNeuropsychologia
- 2000
Movement and Mind: A Functional Imaging Study of Perception and Interpretation of Complex Intentional Movement Patterns
- Psychology, BiologyNeuroImage
- 2000
A functional neuroimaging study with positron emission tomography in which six healthy adult volunteers were scanned while watching silent computer-presented animations showed increased activation in association with mental state attribution in four main regions: medial prefrontal cortex, temporoparietal junction, basal temporal regions, and extrastriate cortex.
Social perception from visual cues: role of the STS region
- Biology, PsychologyTrends in Cognitive Sciences
- 2000